The 'no-changers' have it

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| Some other historical perspectives are also in order. While the BJP's vote share in this election is not yet known, its seat count is in the same ballpark range as it was in 1998 and 1995. That would suggest, a priori, that the BJP vote share remains broadly unchanged, and because the victory margins are large, that some of the post-Godhra vote surge remains intact even five years later. So to a limited extent this is Mr Modi's victory layered over and above the BJP's. Mr Modi led his forces into battle, and it is evident that he did not rely too much on the support of either fellow-BJP leaders from other states or even perhaps on the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, which like Achilles is said to have been sulking in its tent. Despite that, the end result is not very different from a decade ago. The boring truth seems to be that the solid BJP base in Gujarat has once again manifested itself, and there is a thin Modi icing on top of that cake. Whether that is because of his polarising ability, his 'communal' appeal, or his development track record of the past five years "" very creditable as it is "" is hard to tell; a safe bet would be that it is all three. |
| It is also worth recalling that the BJP in the state split about a year before the 1998 election, when Shankarsinh Vaghela broke away from the party. That did not prevent the BJP from sweeping the election then. In 2002, the Patel sub-caste represented by Keshubhai Patel, the former chief minister, was said to be unhappy in Saurashtra at Keshubhai's marginalisation, and many predicted that this would affect the BJP's chances. It did not happen. So it was hoping for too much that the same marginalised Mr Patel's more open rebellion this time round would help swing the balance against the BJP. Sonia Gandhi campaigned using strong language in 2002, she did so again this time. It made no difference on either occasion. |
| The only conclusion possible is that Gujarat is solid BJP country and very much pro-Modi, at least when it comes to assembly elections (in contrast, the Congress did very well in the state in the 2004 Lok Sabha elections). And the Congress, stuck for five successive elections (since 1990) at about 60 seats or less, has no hope of coming within sniffing distance of power without investing a massive and sustained effort. Indeed, given the stability of Gujarat's voting behaviour and the massive margins in some constituencies, it is hard to see how the results can be different even in 2012. |
First Published: Dec 24 2007 | 12:00 AM IST