Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Will BJP spring a surprise in Odisha?

PRAFULLA DAS
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Till recently, the contest was seen as one between BJD and Congress

Even though the date of counting is almost four weeks away and uncertainty prevails over outcome of the Lok Sabha and Assembly polls held in Odisha, the issue is now being discussed at almost every place across the State primarily because the elections were held simultaneously.

The issue is being discussed from various angles since many people had resorted to split ticket voting and political pundits and politicians are finding it hard to arrive at a conclusion.

Interaction with a large number of voters revealed that they had voted for one party to choose their Lok Sabha Member but for a different party to elect their legislator for the Assembly.

In fact, the situation was not so confusing till a few weeks before the polls. The general perception then was that the main contest will be between the ruling Biju Janata Dal and main opposition Congress in almost every Lok Sabha and Assembly constituency. Even opinion polls had made forecast on those lines.

But the scenario has apparently changed when BJP’s Prime Ministerial nominee Narendra Modi visited the State thrice to address election rallies. Soon the saffron party, which had not won even a single Lok Sabha seat and only six Assembly seats in the 2009 election, was viewed as a major contender in a majority of Lok Sabha constituencies and many Assembly segments in different regions of the State.

The sudden emergence of the BJP as a major contender for as many as four Lok Sabha seats in western, and many seats in northern and coastal Odisha, forced media houses to conduct a fresh round of opinion poll. The State has 21 Lok Sabha and 147 Assembly seats.

The high voter turnout in both phases of polling in the State had also added to the speculation over the poll outcome. The State recorded a turnout of 74.3 per cent in this election, against 65.3 per cent in 2009, when elections for Lok Sabha and Assembly were also held simultaneously.

The ruling party leaders were hopeful that their party will perform well in both the Lok Sabha and Assembly polls, with the expectation that the anti-BJD votes would be divided among the Congress, the BJP, independents and other parties, while the BJP leaders were hoping for a miracle performance.

As regards the Congress, though many party leaders were not sure of winning as many Lok Sabha seats as they had did in 2009, they were hopeful of winning more Assembly seats than last year. The party had won six Lok Sabha and 27 Assembly seats in 2009.

While it is being observed that BJP is likely to perform better than Congress with regard to the Lok Sabha poll, the workers of the faction-ridden Congress are lamenting that they could have done much better in the Assembly poll had their party been able to take advantage of the anti-incumbency factor that existed against the ruling BJD.

For future bargains


GOING by the ground reality in Odisha, it seems that the findings of opinion polls with regard to the Biju Janata Dal’s (BJD) performance in the Lok Sabha and State Assembly elections may go wrong. The party, which is headed by Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik, is likely to play a crucial role in the post-election coalition formation at the Centre.
He had initially shown some interest in a possible alternative front comprising parties belonging to the non-Congress, non-Bharatiya Janata Party category when meetings were held in New Delhi, but he subsequently preferred to stay aloof and take advantage of a possible fractured verdict.
The BJD survived in Odisha politics by having the BJP as an alliance partner from 1998 to 2009. It helped the party win two Assembly elections consecutively, in 2000 and 2004. After snapping its ties with the BJP before the 2009 general election, it got into a seat-sharing arrangement with the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP), the Communist Party of India (Marxist) and the Communist Party of India to win the elections.
This is the first time the BJD is going to the polls without an alliance or seat-sharing arrangement with any party. Although it has kept itself detached from all parties, it has its options open to join hands with the BJP in the State and the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance at the Centre in case it fails to win the Assembly elections, or become a partner in a non-Congress political formation at the Centre if it secures a majority in the State Assembly.
The BJD decimated the NCP much before the elections by inducting into its fold all four NCP legislators in the State Assembly. After deciding not to enter into any seat-sharing arrangement with the Left parties days before the announcement of the election schedule, the party attempted to have a seat-sharing arrangement with the Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM), which has a strong base in the tribal-dominated Mayurbhanj and Sundargarh districts. But the scenario soon changed when Shibu Soren, the national president of the JMM, opposed the seat-sharing proposal. The BJD cleverly admitted many prominent JMM leaders, including JMM State unit president and former Lok Sabha member Sudam Marandi, thereby strengthening its base in northern Odisha.
In his attempt to win more Lok Sabha seats and secure a majority in the State Assembly, the BJD president also brought to his party fold many prominent leaders of the Congress, the BJP and the CPI.
The BJD came to power in the State in 2000 by joining hands with the BJP when the people voted out the Congress, which had earned a bad name under the rule of Chief Minister J.B. Patnaik, now Assam Governor. It initially talked of fighting corruption. But in the aftermath of the anti-Christian riots in Kandhamal district in 2008, the party ended its partnership with the BJP and talked primarily of development.

From 2009 onwards, the BJD has indulged in Centre-bashing, primarily to keep its vote bank intact. It kept blaming the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government at the Centre for allegedly neglecting the cause of Odisha in various fields. It also continued to demand special category State status for Odisha. The party even organised a rally in New Delhi to press its demand though the State did not fulfil the criteria for being accorded such a status.
Naveen Patnaik, the founder president of the BJD, which came into being in December 1997 and was named after his late father Biju Patnaik to retain the anti-Congress vote base, has no doubt succeeded in carrying his father’s legacy forward and winning elections by selling his father’s dream of a prosperous Odisha. But this time he has a new opponent: Pyarimohan Mohapatra, his one-time adviser and election manager. A Rajya Sabha member, Mohapatra heads the Odisha Janmorcha, a party he floated with the sole intention of challenging Naveen Patnaik. The BJD president had branded him a traitor for allegedly engineering a coup attempt against him in May 2012.
It is not Mohapatra alone who has launched a new party. Several parties have been launched in the State recently, including the Ama Odisha Party (AMO) led by J.B. Patnaik’s son-in-law Soumya Ranjan Patnaik, and the Samata Kranti Dal led by Braja Kishore Tripathy, a former Union Minister and Naveen Patnaik’s erstwhile party colleague.
Naveen Patnaik is confident of winning the elections this time. The Janmorcha has failed to gain any strength. Moreover, the AOP is likely to play a significant role in weakening the base of the Congress to the advantage of the BJD. The AOP was formed after Soumya Ranjan Patnaik was ousted from the Congress for anti-party activities.
Another factor that makes Naveen Patnaik confident is his success in preventing the BJP from entering into an alliance with the Janmorcha or other parties. By preventing such an alliance, Patnaik has given the BJP’s national leaders a hint that his party may be available for the NDA in the post-election situation.
Naveen Patnaik, however, had to face a major challenge this time. His party was flooded with more than 50,000 applications from people seeking the party ticket, and many BJD leaders turned rebels after being denied the ticket .
The BJD, which has managed to maintain its anti-Centre stand with a view to developing a strong regional identity, may win the 2014 elections. It has kept the Biju legacy alive by floating a large number of welfare schemes over the years named after the late leader.
In the 1998 general election, the BJD’s first trial of strength, the party won nine of the 12 seats it contested, while the BJP won seven of the nine seats it fought as per the seat-sharing arrangement between the two parties.
In the 1999 Lok Sabha elections, the BJD won 10 of the 12 seats it fought and the BJP all the nine it contested. In the February 2000 Assembly elections, the alliance bagged 106 of the total 147 seats, the BJD winning 68 of the 84 seats it contested and the BJP 38 of 63. In 2004, when Naveen Patnaik decided to lose one year of his term and hold the Assembly and Lok Sabha elections simultaneously, the BJD won 11 Lok Sabha seats, the BJP seven, the Congress two and the JMM one. In the Assembly elections, the BJD-BJP alliance was able to win 93 of the 147 seats: the BJD 61 and the BJP 32. In 2009, when the Assembly elections were held along with the Lok Sabha elections, the BJD had seat-sharing arrangements with other parties, and its candidates won in as many as 103 seats.
Whether Naveen Patnaik’s promise to build the Odisha of his father’s dreams will help him win yet another election will be known when the votes are counted on May 16.
Prafulla Das

Standing alone for the first time, Patnaik battles ‘Modi wave’

PRAFULLA DAS
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Naveen Patnaik. File Photo: Lingaraj Panda
The HinduNaveen Patnaik. File Photo: Lingaraj Panda

The infighting within BJD is affecting the party’s prospects in at least 10 Assembly constituencies

It is for the first time that Odisha Chief Minister and Biju Janata Dal (BJD) president Naveen Patnaik is fighting the simultaneous Lok Sabha and Assembly elections alone. Surprisingly, he is having a tough time in coastal Odisha, one of his party’s strongholds.
As the coastal and northern regions of the State are scheduled to go to the polls on April 17, Mr. Patnaik is leaving no stone unturned by addressing a series of public meetings seeking votes for his party nominees. There was no number-2 leader in the party to share his burden, and he has engaged many Odia film stars to draw crowds at party rallies.
This is for the first time that the BJD is fighting the elections without having alliance or seat-sharing arrangement with any other party, and Mr. Patnaik having no known advisor.
Bureaucrat-turned politician Pyarimohan Mohapatra, who earlier used to manage elections for the BJD, is not with Mr. Patnaik since 2012.
Mr. Mohapatra, however, has not succeeded in strengthening the Odisha Janmorcha that he had founded after Mr. Patnaik ousted him for engineering a failed coup attempt against him almost two years ago. Mr. Patnaik and his party colleagues are happy that Mr. Mohapatra’s party had failed to cause much harm to their party’s electoral prospects.
Mr. Patnaik and his lieutenants, however, are facing an uphill task since BJP had emerged as the third major contender across the State by riding the ‘Modi wave’, even though the main opposition, Congress, had remained weak due to factionalism.
Even though the BJD alone had, in the 2009 elections, won nine of the 11 Lok Sabha constituencies and around 70 of 77 the Assembly seats going to the polls on April 17, Mr. Patnaik was also finding the going tough because of infighting in the party in many areas.
The infighting within BJD is affecting the party’s prospects in at least 10 Assembly constituencies. Many of his party’s Lok Sabha members, Ministers and sitting legislators are also facing the anti-incumbency factor.
Mr. Patnaik continues to blame the Congress-led government at the Centre for allegedly neglecting the cause of Odisha, and criticise the Bharatiya Janata Party, stressing the need to prevent the saffron party in forming government at the Centre.
Mr. Patnaik continues his assurances to fulfil his father’s dreams of building a prosperous and developed Odisha, to thinning crowds at his rallies, in a bid to gain votes for his party nominees in the State for the fourth consecutive time.
The opposition parties have already started criticising his promise as the State was carrying the ‘Most Backward’ tag even after he had ruled for 14 years. The outcome of the polls, being held amid the ‘Modi wave’ campaign, may prove the pollster wrong if voters shy away from the BJD in coastal Odisha for varied reasons.

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Prafulla Das DECEMBER 02, 2017 00:15 IST UPDATED:  DECEMBER 02, 2017 21:00 IST SHARE ARTICLE   1.62K  43 PRINT A   A   A ...