Mathihalli Madan Mohan
Senior Journalist and Columnist
HUBLI 580 032 ( Mobile-94480-74872)
A high command which is not high?
HUBLI, 08th
July 2012
The BJP high command is neither high nor has
any command left.
This stark
truth emerges succinctly in the inept manner in which the BJP high command has
been ineptly handling the dissidence in Karnataka BJP which is threatening the
existence of the first saffron ministry south of Vindhyas.
At a time
party should have pulled up the socks in preparing itself to take on the scam tainted
Congress in the forthcoming elections to the parliament couple of months away,
the BJP has been presenting an inedible face, of a party, which is unable to
manage its own internal crisis and has allowed the canker of dissidence to
develop into a Frankenstein as it were.
The younger
generation of party leadership which has been in put in place with great
flourish as a process of transition from the Vajpayee and Advani era, has
proved to the hilt that the party can longer claim to be a party with difference
but that it consists of men of clay, who have more faith in concept of
political opportunism to the principled value based tactics. Even the patriarch
L K Advani finds himself unable to step the developing and has allowed himself
to be a passive spectator.
Otherwise,
how can one explain the strange phenomenon of the party compromising on party
disciple and as a matter of fact appears to pamper it off and on.
The party leadership hardly moved when the group of three
ministers comprising of the Reddy trio, open raised a banner of revolt
demanding the change of leadership of the Yeddyurappa government and resorted
to the politics of herding the supporting legislators to the resorts. The party
chose to turn a blind eye to the indiscretion and instead worked overtime to
bring about a compromise. And all those who had names to the leadership at the
state level were allowed to get away, even without a warning. The complaints about the style of working of the
then Chief Minster Yeddyurappa were pushed under the carpet, by a leadership,
which refused to take cognizance of the ground realities in Karnataka.
The
tantrums thrown up by the former Chief Minister Yeddyurappa, the latest case in
the genre has been sum product of the laissez faire attitude of the national
party in the matter of enforcing the party discipline.
Ever since
he was asked to step down in the light of indictment by the Lokayukta report on
the illegal mining and plethora of land denotification cases, which have
surfaced which resulted in his arrest Yeddyurappa has become a bug bear to the
party s leadership.
When he was
asked to quit in the light of the scam report, Yeddyurappa demurred
deliberately. When he had to ultimately
yield, he did so in making it amply
clear that it is his, rather than the party, which runs as for as Karnataka
affairs is concerned. He forced an
election on the choice of his successor and defeated the nominee of the high command.
Sadananda Gowda was his nominee for the post and Gowda defeated Jagadish
Shettar, who had the backing of the high command.
The high command
had no problem with the new Chief Minister and as a matter of fact it was appreciative
of the work being done by him in providing a clean
government and taking care to keep the family members at a distance unlike what
had happened during his predecessors days.
However
Gowdas effort to run a government independent of his mentor angered Yeddyurappa
like anything and he started an open campaign seeking his removal. But now the
tables have turned and Yeddyurappa demanded the removal of the very man he had
installed in office and wanted him to be replaced by Jagadish Shettar who in
the meantime had been weaned into his camp. Initially high command was not
willing to concede and promised number of times to beleaguered Sadananda Gowda that
he was backed to the hilt by the high command.
But dropped him as a hot potato when Yeddyurappa held out the threat of precipitating
the crisis by making group of nine ministers belonging to his camp to resign
enmasse. The high command became panicky and had to give in to the pressures
tactics of Yeddyurappa.
The crop of the present second generation
leadership which is at the helms of affairs was the first to cave in to the
dictates of Yeddyurappa and lobbed the ball in the court of the patriarch
Advani before making the final announcement.
Advani had always stood for a firm stand against those
who have been making open mockery of the party discipline. At one stage he was
reportedly of the view that the party should go for fresh mandate in Karnataka
instead succumbing to the pressures of the Yeddyurappa group. But had no option to fall in line the light of
the combined pressure of the younger group that it is important to save the
party juncture at this stage instead of taking a risk of fresh poll. And Advani
had to yield and going by the newspaper reports “with tears in his eyes”. Even the “iron” in the “iron man” (Loh
Purush) has started melting. And that is the tragedy of the BJP under the
dispensation of younger generation, which is more interested in the power game
than anything else.
Eom 05.51
hours. 09.07.12
.
1 comment:
The current BJP leaders are just using the name of the BJP to win the tickets and elections.They are not true representatives of BJP mandate.Infact I would say they are the religious leaders in BJP attires.
The caste-ism is at its heights.there is no other better example than this to show the caste-ism still exists in Karnataka.
Why only lingayat? why not vokkaliga or Brahmin? How does it matter really what caste CM belongs to? Let these so called BJP leaders enjoy another year,because that is what the time they have I think.There after no BJP in karnataka.Shame on central BJP leadership who is entertaining all this.
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