By Insaf
Goa Cong Joins BJP
Mockery of people’s verdict
People’s will be damned, is a dispiriting message now coming from Goa. With eight of 11 Congress MLAs joining the ruling BJP with 20 MLAs, and on Thursday last Speaker Ramesh Tawadkar accepting the Goa Congress Legislature Party resolution to merge with the BJP, the State will barely have an opposition, critical to democracy. The grand old party is left with just three MLAs who now beg the question, “If they have merged Congress into BJP, then which party do we (three) belong to?” At the same, their taking a pledge in January at a church, temple of dargah of remaining with the Congress before polls in February ‘amounts to defying God’! The Congress, at a big loss, still chooses to put up a strong front, terming the crossing over as part of BJP’s “Operation Kichad (muck)’ and the “break” was fast-tracked because of ‘Bharat Jodo yatra’s’ visible success. Not really, as recall in 2019, 10 Congress MLAs had switched over to BJP and that its accusation that BJP’s tactics are only to ‘break’ doesn’t hold good. The grim reality is that the Congress can no longer keep its flock together. Plus, the claim of PCC President Amit Patkar that BJP “has spent Rs 40-50 crore on each person to merge” doesn’t carry weight. In all of this, the worst loser is the voter, whose choice of party and candidates meets a big boo in the ongoing political shenanigans. Since its transition to a full-fledged state 35 years ago, in 1987, Goa has had 16 chief ministers, with some holding office for barely a month or even less. Tragic indeed!
Eyeing Himachal Polls
The timing of the Union Cabinet approving a Constitution amendment Bill, seeking to grant tribal status to certain communities in some States has raised eyebrows. More so, as the ruling BJP is expected to benefit from it in the Himachal Pradesh elections in November. On Wednesday, the approval was given to the Hatti community in Trans-Giri region of Sirmaur district, among other communities in Scheduled Tribes list in Chhattisgarh, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Uttar Pradesh. The demand it is said to be pending since over 50 years. In Himachal, the decision is expected to benefit 1.6 lakh Hatti people, which form an electorally influential community and may favour the ruling BJP, which had swept the polls in 2017, winning 44 of the 68 seats. This time round, AAP has entered the fray turning the polls to be a three-cornered fight other than the Congress. According to calculations, the Hatti community is concentrated in the four constituencies and could play a significant role in at least nine seats in Shimla (once a Congress stronghold) and Sirmaur. Importantly, BJP was the first party to recognise the demand during the 2009 Assembly polls and has since incorporated it in its manifesto. The community has put its weight behind it and the timing shall be decisive.
Inactive Political Parties
Bogus political parties are getting weeded out. On Tuesday last, the Election Commission ordered delisting of 86 ‘non-existent’ registered unrecognised political parties (RUPPs), in ‘larger public interest and for purity of electoral democracy’. The number of such parties failing to comply with electoral rules has gone up to 537, since May 25! An additional 253 RUPPs were declared as ‘inactive’. The action follows a physical verification by Chief Electoral Officers of concerned States/UTs such as Bihar, Delhi, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Telangana and Uttar Pradesh or is based on reports of ‘undelivered letters/notices from postal authority’. Worse, these RUPPs hadn’t contested either a single State Assembly or General elections and were still enjoying benefits under Symbols Order, 1968, which mandated putting up 5% of total candidates in Assembly polls. While the delisting, says the EC will help voters make an ‘informed decision’, it must re-look at the electoral bond scheme, which many political parties say lacks transparency. Incidentally, BJP is its biggest beneficiary bagging 94.5% of the bonds worth over Rs 210 crore. Will it question the Government?
Bengal’s Street Fights
Enough is enough, doesn’t apply to at least West Bengal. The street fights in parts of Kolkata and Howarh on Tuesday last between arch rivals, the ruling TMC and opposition BJP, are getting worse. The areas turned into a battlefield as BJP cadres clashed with the police, burnt a police vehicle and beat up a cop, while trying to get past barricades to prevent their march towards the secretariat, to protest against the alleged corrupt practices of TMC. While the BJP accused Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee of not giving political space to the opposition and it was her cadres which stage managed the hooliganism, the TMC said “it’s a bigger game plan to destabilise the State this festive season.” Will Mamata take a cue from her UP counterpart and rein in BJP ‘hooligans”? Her articulate MP Mahua Moitra’s tweet gives an idea. She tweeted: ‘Whether the West Bengal government should follow UP’s system and bulldoze houses of saffron camp leaders, which damaged public property…Will BJP stand by its own policy or get their chadds in a twist?’
Operation Lotus’ In Punjab
First Delhi and now Punjab. The AAP accuses BJP of running ‘Operation Lotus’ to buy its MLAs and topple Bhagwant Mann’s government! On Wednesday last, Delhi Chief Minister Kejriwal claimed the BJP attempted to buy ‘10 party MLAs in Punjab by offering them Rs 25 crore each and ministerial posts.” Similar accusation was made last month but the attempt was thwarted in Delhi amidst high drama. In Chandigarh, Punjab Finance Minister Cheema said the MLAs were assured “a meeting will be arranged with ‘vadde baau ji’ (big brother) and offered Rs 50-70 crore if they brought three-four MLAs.” Plus, BJP had kept aside “Rs 1,375 crore to topple the government, (break away 55 of the 92 MLAs)” like a kitty of Rs 800 crore in Delhi. BJP’s state unit says it’s ‘a bundle of lies’ and AAP was only ‘trying to divert people’s attention from its failures.’ But AAP insists ‘phone calls were made to MLAs’ and following a complaint, the Punjab police has registered an FIR under Prevention of Corruption Act and IPC. Will it crack the case? Or will AAP look as running out of ideas to taint its rival?
‘Lawless’ Bihar
Is ‘jungle raj’ back in Bihar? The shocking incident of four gunmen going on a rampage in Begusarai district, killing a man and critically injuring 11 people, should have Chief Minister Nitish Kumar worried. Suspension of seven cops for dereliction of duty is a reaction oft seen. But that two motorcycle-borne gunmen went on a rampage firing indiscriminately at people in crowded areas Barauni Thermal Chowk, Barauni, Teghra, Bachwara and Rajendra Bridge, doesn’t bode well for the administration. While four suspects are arrested, security beefed up in the district and all entry points barricaded after the shooting, Nitish says he senses a ‘conspiracy’. Whose? The BJP offers an answer: “Whenever a ‘Mahagathbandan’ government comes to power, law and order situation starts deteriorating”. Nitish and his deputy Tejaswi Yadav must prove it wrong. —INFA