Lack of Electoral Assertiveness of Hindi Heartland Parties
By: Amit Bhushan Date: 3rd Jan. 2020
With the ‘agenda’ being doctored by larger parties, smaller parties are in dilemma. While they have protect ‘ideology (read ‘vote banks’ amongst loyalists)’ on one hand, they also have to fend off populist appeal from the competing central parties. Won’t be surprised if their Netas are found asserting that the ‘Game’ politics is smothering these parties and they may be falling prey to scheming rather than popular appeals. This is far from truth as ‘Game’ is all about improving choice/s for voters/people, as long as parties/Netas follow some ideals with honesty would be able to find ways to pursue these agenda. Game politics is already seeing their (lower level) Netas jump these smaller ships, and some tough decision-making becoming order of the day, say in Maharashtra. To be fair to these political leaders, Game does limit focus on top 2-3 (4th may be an option, but with great difficulty and others fall merely on margins) players or serious electoral contenders from policy-making perspective and cuts the immaterial chaff which may not yield anything much for ordinary people. It must however be noted that the author is in full appreciation for the ‘individuals’ who put up an electoral fight in a constituency (or two), who may want to prove a point. In fact the media should do perhaps more (than what it has be doing presently) to highlight cause of these people, one example of which could be one who defeated a standing CM in the recent state elections. Elections are the best method by which they can express these agendas but they would need to seize this opportunity.
Currently, there seems to be very little collaboration between smaller parties and any other form of support other than pre and post electoral tie-ups with seat/vote-sharing. Various forms of tie-ups from just campaign presence, to seat surrender to seat-sharing (with joint campaign) etc. has very little appreciation in amongst the Netadom of smaller parties. The smaller parties will need to do a re-think over these aspects of electoral politics and would need to exploit the electoral opportunity in different parts to send their message to voters. They need to ponder at the role of various media channels (not just news channels) and find ways to exploit these by making electoral arrangements. This is especially imperative as larger parties start playing their electoral Game with emotive non-issues with such symphony in full public display. The (smaller) parties which are dominant in the state going to election/s will have to play a more accommodative role in order that the message (of smaller/regional parties) of these parties flows smoothly to the voters as well as other parties. Such relationships of course will be based on an environment of trust and understanding amongst the Netas, and there is need for perhaps some urgency in this regards. It is via such mechanisms that these parties may be able to expand and/or assert themselves or else they would continue to face challenges from the larger/national parties. Of course the leaders do face a challenge to make such collaboration mutually beneficial for such ideas to fly and jumping-jacks within their parties would continue to ensure that this ‘job’ is going to be very difficult.
It may however be noted that smaller parties will need to have their own plans for their respective state/region especially to bolster economic development and key issues like say depleting water table/lack of irrigation facilities/healthcare/education etc. Many of the regional parties and their Netas have far too poor a track-record is another challenge which these Netas would have to deal with. Raising ‘emotive issues’ in synchronized manner and playing symphony with larger parties in yesteryears may have resulted in the party’s growth/rise stature of Netas. However, ‘Game’ politics has managed to effectively ‘change’ the agenda and bring-out issues that are followed by public, forcing the commercial news media to ‘succumb’ to these issues to maintain its viewership. Thus, the National parties have been pushed to talk about Jobs, Skilling, Industry, Export, Agriculture, Rural Development and Healthcare etc. and divergence from such agenda has cause a loss in elections, depicted clearly in Jharkhand. For the smaller parties, they will need to find the addressable issues within these lines, rather than focus on emotive polarization as in past. This is because even the larger parties are being pushed to follow the ‘public/Game agenda’ and therefore smaller parties will be increasingly unable to ‘set agenda or even try out playing old symphony’. In any case ‘public’ has shown what translates into votes now. However the political pundits may have their take. Let the ‘Game’ evolve…..