This leaves many lessons and takeaways. Let us list the ten most important here:
Why didn’t the intense, personalised campaign by Prime Minister Narendra Modi work? Does it show a decline in his popularity? Hold your horses. Karnataka reminds us again that the voter makes a distinction between when Modi is himself on the ticket and when he seeks votes for others. He might still be able to hold a lamppost election for the Lok Sabha. That’s why he wins Gujarat. He seeks the vote for himself there. Not in other states.
In their 10th year in power now, the Modi-Shah BJP has shown a stark inadequacy at replicating their Lok Sabha success in Vidhan Sabhas. They’ve suffered serial losses in the states or settled for coalitions conceding much more ground to the partner than they would’ve liked. Check out Maharashtra, Haryana and Bihar for as long as Nitish’s wagon was tied to their engine.
The Modi-Shah BJP model of appointing lightweight chief ministers from New Delhi was frayed already. Karnataka is the rudest reminder of how unworkable it is. Except for Manohar Lal Khattar in Haryana, who carries on in his second term — albeit after conceding half his government to Dushyant Chautala — each one of these high command choices has produced a disaster. One, Devendra Fadnavis, has been reduced to deputy chief minister. Basavaraj Bommai is just the worst yet. The ‘high commandist’ parties usually detest their own strong state leaders. As did the BJP with Yediyurappa. That has devastated it in two elections, 2013 and 2023.
You can’t say polarisation doesn’t work. Or, the BJP would not have maintained its vote share despite its super-incompetent governance. But reverse logic works too. A divisive appeal excites your faithful and likely also puts off those in the middle, the small percentage of uncommitted voters who matter in the end. In this case, the many disillusioned with the JD (S) preferred the Congress instead. The data so far tells us that the BJP’s vote share is mostly intact, the Congress’s has gone up by 5 per cent, and that of the JD-S has declined by just over 5. It looks like a straight transfer. We can risk saying that when these voters looked for another choice, they didn’t want a divisive one. Polarisation, therefore, is a double-edged sword. It can also put off enough Hindu voters to decimate you in a tight election.
The lesson for the Congress is similar to that for the BJP. That if you have strong state leaders, as in Siddaramaiah and DK Shivakumar, you can win despite the odds. The Gandhis’ ability to win states for you is enormously less than even Modi’s. But it’s unlikely that this will be accepted. Not if you have been watching Congress spokespersons all day giving credit for the win to Rahul Gandhi.
And finally, the evidence shows that in 21st-century India, Tipu Sultan does not matter. He may have been a good or awful guy over two centuries ago, but abusing or adoring him won’t pay for my kid’s education now, get me a job, or put water in my tap. Leave him to historians and, you know what, for fake outrage on your warrior TV channels and in the living rooms of your New Lutyens.
These are personal views of the writer. They do not necessarily reflect the opinion of
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