The seashore quintet contributes 128 of the 543 Lok Sabha MPs (excluding the two nominated Anglo-Indian members) but has cold-shouldered the BJP, except occasionally for Andhra Pradesh and Odisha in small measure.
The party believes the east’s outlook is about to “change for the better”. “Usually, party presidents focus only on their turfs but Shah gives equal importance to states where the BJP’s base is small,” a senior leader said.
The BJP had singled out Odisha as its sunrise state after the party faced a “stiff challenge” from Mamata Banerjee’s Trinamool Congress in West Bengal, remained embroiled in coalition related issues with Telugu Desam in Andhra Pradesh, and floundered in Tamil Nadu.
“Target 120 (of the 147 assembly seats)” is the catchphrase adopted for the Odisha polls that will happen simultaneously with the Lok Sabha elections in 2019. “There are two main reasons for our confidence — people’s trust in (Prime Minister Narendra) Modi and that Odisha has benefitted from this year’s Union Budget,” said the leader, citing the Rs 52.52-billion allocation for railway projects in the state, a Rs 1.5 billion uptick over the previous allotment.
The BJP was chuffed when Modi accorded eight “backward” Odisha districts the status of “aspirational” districts, but Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik opted out of the scheme. “Patnaik’s dole politics to nurture a vote bank has limitations. Odisha’s migrant labourers in Surat and Delhi wonder why they don’t see the same development in their state. The buzzword is ‘aspiration’,” a central BJP functionary said.
Patnaik has mobilised 39 “star” canvassers, announced a drought package, and promised to make Bijepur a municipality. Shah, on the other hand, has directed three regional leaders, including state party chief Basanta Panda and legislature party leader K V Singhdeo, to stay put and work under the superintendence of Union minister Dharmendra Pradhan.
Singhdeo noted the BJP nosed out the Congress from Bijepur after it won six of the seven zilla parishad seats in the 2017 local body elections and polled 92,000 votes — 35,000 more than the BJD and the Congress combined.
The local body polls broke the jinx for the BJP. For 10 years, it rode on the BJD’s back and barely registered a presence after the alliance broke. From securing only 36 seats in 2012, the BJP bagged 294 of the 851 zilla parishad seats and won eight zilla parishads in 30 districts. The BJD retained its supremacy, but the Congress slipped to a distant third. “The rural votes we secured will be reflected in our overall vote share,” stressed Singhdeo.
Statistics and vote shares apart, the BJP’s biggest challenge is denting Patnaik’s largely unsullied image. Odisha BJP spokesperson Sajjan Sharma said, “His image is a myth because not a leaf moves without his decree.” A central leader claimed: “There was no credible opposition to Patnaik. Once we came out, we took up issues and coaxed people’s trust.”
The BJP conceded its campaign would be boosted if it offered an alternate vision and projected a leader. Right now, sources maintained, it will contest under a “collective leadership” although Pradhan’s name is finding currency.
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