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Does India Still Need a Hindu Nationalist Party?

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A look at the future prospects of India's controversial right-wing politicians.

BY ELLIOT HANNON | APRIL 30, 2010


It's been a tough 12 months for India's Bharatiya Janata Party. Last spring, the center-right political counterweight to the Gandhi clan's left-leaning Congress Party was routed in India's national elections, losing two dozen seats in the country's lower house after mustering just 19 percent of the national vote. The results continued the BJP's slide, wiping out a third of the seats it had amassed during its political high a decade earlier.

After last spring's crushing defeat, the party vowed to rise again. But then more losses followed in state elections. Most recently, a top BJP figure's testimony about his role in 2002 religious riots in Gujarat that left nearly 2,000 Muslims dead highlighted the lingering image problems the party faces. It also pointed to a larger issue plaguing the BJP: Can the party survive while still holding on to its founding ideology?

So far, there have been no easy answers. The BJP rose to power a decade ago brandishing an assertive brand of nationalism called Hindutva. Hindutva -- meaning, essentially, "Hindu-ness" -- stirred a potent mix of cultural nostalgia and aggressive religious nationalism that proved to be political gold. Hindutva also has a conveniently loose definition: It can imply anything from a fairly benign affirmation of Hindu culture and history to a more virulently anti-Muslim chauvinism. Because of this, the BJP was able to form alliances with hard-line subgroups like Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS) and Shiv Sena, a Maharashtra-based party whose politics were expanded from localized ethnic politics to include a form of Hindutva.

This strategy was immensely productive in driving votes among India's upper castes, particularly the growing middle class residing in the cities. Emotive issues for conservative Hindus, such as the 1992 destruction of the Babri Mosque at Ayodhya and the movement to build a Hindu temple in its place, not only set off nationwide "communal" riots between Muslim and Hindu communities, they also galvanized the BJP's political base.

Once the BJP came into office, however, finally cobbling together a lasting coalition in 1999 after two shorter stints in power, its ties to conservative groups became more problematic. Forced by the realities of a coalition government to tack toward the center, the party was seen by its old allies to be abandoning its Hindutva principles. Meanwhile, the RSS and Shiv Sena themselves became political liabilities. Last fall, the Indian government released a report on the destruction of the Babri Mosque and fingered the RSS for fomenting communalism that led to riots across the country. Shiv Sena, too, has a penchant for violence and a willingness to publicly attack even big stars -- recently, Bollywood actor Shah Rukh Kahn -- for insufficient patriotism.

Caught between the demands of office and of its old friends, and pushing a feel-good nationalist agenda that began to seem out of touch to rural voters, the BJP was voted out of power in 2004 after just one full term in office.

But instead of abandoning its Hindutva ideology in the wake of defeat, the BJP only retrenched. Sudheendra Kulkarni, the party's former national secretary, told me that a conservative cadre read the 2004 election as a sign that a return to first principles was in order. "There is a vocal view within the party that has a Hindutva-only approach," he said. Caught between the desire to appease its Hindutva ideologues and the need to appeal to a new set of voters so far unswayed by nationalist appeals, the BJP has appeared to be listing and unable to do either.

Internal slip-ups have only made things worse. Last year's election seemed to be the perfect chance to reach out to a wider demographic, as the country went to the polls less than six months after the November 2008 attacks in Mumbai. The BJP emphasized its national-security credentials, charging that the Congress government's response was weak and indecisive.

In the elections, the BJP's support declined drastically among its base of Hindutva supporters. Urban voters, the party's traditional base, abandoned the BJP-run National Democratic Alliance, dropping by 13 percent from 2004. This is a troubling sign for the BJP, given that the party's ideological makeup excludes pretty much all non-Hindus in the country -- some 230 million people. The BJP has essentially ceded the sizeable Muslim vote in India (13 percent of the population), and the country's 26 million Christians (2.3 percent) are also skeptical of Hindutva.

But the BJP also faces obstacles to reaching new Hindu voters. While the vast majority of the country is notionally Hindu, religious affiliation is often trumped by other forms of caste, ethnic, and regional identifications. So when the party trumpets a form of cultural nationalism that can overheat and turn violent, it faces a perception problem: namely, that it is anti-minority.

Recent events have only hammered home this image. Gujarat is a success story that the BJP can ill afford to forfeit as it tries to position itself as the party of better governance. Under RSS favorite Chief Minister Narendra Modi's leadership, the state has become a model of development in India: a business-friendly state with an efficient, responsible bureaucracy. But the 2002 Gujarat riots continue to blunt the political impact of the party's successes there. Last month, Modi was questioned about his alleged complicity in the violence by a Supreme Court-appointed Special Investigation Team (his testimony has not been released since the inquiry is still in the early stages).

Although it still seems unlikely that Modi will see jail time or even the inside of a courtroom, the issue still taints him, as well as the party, given his national stature and outspoken support for Hindutva. It's bad timing for the BJP, and there are reports that the party's restrained backing of Modi during the investigation is due to a cooling of support for its most controversial member. Meanwhile, the BJP is taking steps to distance itself from Shiv Sena, publicly condemning the hard-line group's opposition to immigrants from northern India settling in Mumbai.

Clearly, the BJP is trying to make some changes -- but they may not be the right ones. It selected new leadership, opting for a relatively young face: Nitin Gadkari, a newcomer to the national stage who previously headed the party's Maharashtra state organization. Gadkari was backed by the RSS, however, suggesting that changes may be more superficial than real. Meanwhile, Varun Gandhi, the party's new national secretary, is also making news. Gandhi, a youthful defector from his family's Congress party, won in his first run for office last year -- but landed in jail during his campaign for making inflammatory remarks about Muslims. Gandhi's ascension to the leadership suggests that the BJP is not leaving Hindutva behind any time soon. Whether the party can win on these terms in 2014, however, is very much an open question.

Does India Still Need a Hindu Nationalist Party? ? By Elliot Hannon | Foreign Policy
 
Well we do need a proper center to right party without the religious aspect. Somthing like the Swatantrata Party in the 60s. A conservative party focussed on minal government role in public life and small budget and at the same time promoting free market economy and advocating ending various subsidies and all other feel good policies that are actually harmful in the long run.

The BJP's core problem is that it is a synthesis (albeit a patchy one) between the pro-business anti-big govt. swatantrata party ideologues and the swadeshi, populists and left leaning (in terms of economic policies) RSS ideologues. Hence the BJP tends to get split between the two political extremes and can't do wither properly.

I'd say bring back the Swatantrata Party. A good write up is here:
Revive the Swatantra Party
 
What an amusing thread as long as there is democracy India will have many parties, Those who do not have support will slowly die, Like Uma Bharti's party and several of them were short lived.
 
The problem with the BJP is that it not only lives in the past but is actually a hostage to it. Its key constituency, the urban middle class has moved on from the Ayodhya issue to concentrate on the economic upliftment of their families and the BJP is finding itself stuck there with only loonies for company. Most Hindus no longer buy the "muslims are being favoured" canard. Muslims have paid a heavy price for their lack of education in the last 20 years finding themselves mostly shut off from India's economic success. Difficult to still see them as being favoured and since government jobs are not the aim of the new urbanites, even reservation has become less of an issue.

The BJP's attitude during the investigation of the Malegaon blasts exposed them completely as being hypocritical about terrorism . Showed them having one standard for Muslim terrorists and another for Hindu terrorists. Defending terrorists no matter their religion should have been a completely no-go area for the BJP. That they choose to do otherwise and their refusal to come down hard on moral policing loonies cost them atleast one vote - mine!
 
Its not fair guys. Don't be pseudo secular. Being secular is fair, but pseudo secularism is not. Congress thrives on minority votes and vote bank politics. Targeting the Hindu voters is not on their agenda. And their justification for the vote bank politics is , "that is how a democracy functions".
Hindu voters are not taken seriously, as there is no specific group called as "Hindu block" or "hindu voters". The minorities vote on a whole. their decisions are one, they vote as a community unlike Hindus.
So instead of voting for someone like Congress, who does not prioritize Hindus, why should Hindus neglect BJP.
If argument is based on potential to continue the development; let me remind everyone that it was the BJP that had set the ball rolling to begin with.
Guys, just because someone roots for BJP, that does not mean he is being a extremist or is anti secular. Hope you guys drop the pseudo secular thinking hats and think about the issue.
Also one thing that annoys me about Congress is the hierarchy system. How long are we going to "serve" the same family? I like people like Pranab and PC even MMS, but "Rahul Baba" and "Soniyaji" disgust me to the core.
Ashok Chavan the current Mah. CM, was chosen just because he sucks upto "rahul Baba"! He was a bloody unknown picture. Its just disgusting man!!
 
The problem with the BJP is that it not only lives in the past but is actually a hostage to it. Its key constituency, the urban middle class has moved on from the Ayodhya issue to concentrate on the economic upliftment of their families and the BJP is finding itself stuck there with only loonies for company. Most Hindus no longer buy the "muslims are being favoured" canard. Muslims have paid a heavy price for their lack of education in the last 20 years finding themselves mostly shut off from India's economic success. Difficult to still see them as being favoured and since government jobs are not the aim of the new urbanites, even reservation has become less of an issue.

The BJP's attitude during the investigation of the Malegaon blasts exposed them completely as being hypocritical about terrorism . Showed them having one standard for Muslim terrorists and another for Hindu terrorists. Defending terrorists no matter their religion should have been a completely no-go area for the BJP. That they choose to do otherwise and their refusal to come down hard on moral policing loonies cost them atleast one vote - mine!

What about Congress is it Secular ?
 
We definitely need a strong BJP, or else country would be runover by Pseudo Secularists and deny Hindus their equal rights.

BJP wants a law which treats everyone as equal, whats wrong with it, Pesudo secularists want to give some special privelages to some minorities and treat them as vote banks.

Long Live BJP, I want it to come back to power in the next elections.
 
We definitely need a strong BJP, or else country would be runover by Pseudo Secularists and deny Hindus their equal rights.

BJP wants a law which treats everyone as equal, whats wrong with it, Pesudo secularists want to give some special privelages to some minorities and treat them as vote banks.

Long Live BJP, I want it to come back to power in the next elections.

I agree, but under the likes of Gadkari, the chances look bleak.:cry:
 
I wish the BJP win the next 10 elections...........nothing better then a bunch of right wing idiots running india.
 
BJPs problem is that they promised too much to the rural voters and delivered too little. They should have understood that Congress did a fair enough job of cementing the middle class and the rural voters did not forgive the BJP their failure to deliver on their promises to those voters while opening up the economy for the middle class to progress further. Nobody really cares about religion in any democracy. Certain minorities will always try to vote as a bloc to obtain the most benefits they can as minorities. The majority of the people vote for bread and butter issues. Whether India should be a Hindutva state or a secular state is immaterial to the farmer who sees the price of fuel escalations as a threat to his day to day living whether that farmer is Muslim, Christian or Hindu. The BJP has to realign its economic policies to survive. It should also reconsider its relationship with right wing Hindu parties such as Shiv Sena. These parties are not only the boogeyman to minorities but also to most Hindus who do not want to see India turned into a Hindu version of Saudi Arabia.
 
I wish the BJP win the next 10 elections...........nothing better then a bunch of right wing idiots running india.

Such nonsense from a senior member of this forum only reduces the level of respect for this forum from people who visit this site. I suggest that you keep such thoughts for you to regurgitate out loudly the next time you suffer from a bout of extreme diarrhoea. I am certain that this forum rules prohibit the regugitation of your verbal diarrhoea on any of its threads :no:
 
It is a myth that all minorities vote en bloc. they vote differently region to region. But you can't blame them if they don't vote for a party whose candidates threaten them in their election speeches (Varun Gandhi). In UP its mostly the Yadav parties and Congress. In Bihar and MP, the muslim votes are substantially in the BJP and JD(U) camp because the parties their have focused on developmental issues.
In WB and Kerala Muslims have traditionally vote with the left bloc. In other parts it has been Congress as there is no other alternative.

BJP indulges in as much vote bank politics as Congress does.

That is why we need a right of Centre party that does not dabble into politco-religious ideology. The BJP can continue to do that and end up being a shiv sena clone. But we really have a need to have a true right-of-centre party. I'm sure there will be a strong potential across religious lines but mostly from urban and educated demographics that would vote for them
 
Such nonsense from a senior member of this forum only reduces the level of respect for this forum from people who visit this site.

Why is it nonsense?.....Congress will make india strong in the long run while the BJP will divide india and make it weak.
So from a pakistani point of view who would you rather have running india.



I suggest that you keep such thoughts for you to regurgitate out loudly the next time you suffer from a bout of extreme diarrhoea. I am certain that this forum rules prohibit the regugitation of your verbal diarrhoea on any of its threads :no:

:blah::cheesy:
 
Why is it nonsense?.....Congress will make india strong in the long run while the BJP will divide india and make it weak.
So from a pakistani point of view who would you rather have running india.

:blah::cheesy:

well at least you admit India is strong :lol:

-----------------------------------------------------

I personally am pragmatic about congress.

And not a fan of BJP , i don't like mixing religion and politics.
So i am naturally opposed to any said part
 
Why is it nonsense?.....Congress will make india strong in the long run while the BJP will divide india and make it weak.
So from a pakistani point of view who would you rather have running india.





:blah::cheesy:

BJP does not necessarily "divide" or "make India weaker". In fact once they come into government they do an about turn on their pre election Hindutva policies, both economically and on the stage of relationships with Pakistan. During the last rule of the BJP, there was much more peace discussions with Pakistan than there was between Congress and Pakistan. So actually speaking, inter relations between Pakistan and India was better served with the BJP government.

Taking into account your proposed scenario, are you suggesting that an economically weakened India would serve Pakistan's benefit? If so, take into account the possible factor that India is unable to feed her billion strong population and a large number of them swell to the borders with Bangladesh and Pakistan. Unless you are suggesting that Pakistani and Bangladeshi troops open fire on the refugees then I would suggest that it is in Pakistan's better interests that India grow economically and vice versa between Pakistan and India.
 

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