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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, May 13, 2001 |
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Now, a charisma count
THE ``MINI-ELECTION'' results should help observers meditate on
that most elusive asset of a political leader - charisma,
especially a capacity to garner votes. In particular, the outcome
would need to be dissected in terms of the presumed deepening of
the Vajpayee acceptability on an all-India basis. The results
would provide a pointer whether Mr. Vajpayee's appeal has
acquired such acceptability that his appearance and campaigning
can make a significant difference even in those electoral
contests where the stakes are decidedly less than the prime
ministerial office.
A charismatic leader by words and deeds evokes that potent mix of
hopes, fears, aspirations, and apprehensions that helps the
crowds/electorate to feel that salvation is possible out of the
despair of the moment. A Mamata Banerjee, for example, provides
just that flicker of hope to those sections of the West Bengal
electorate which believe that the Left Front regime has been too
violent, too sectarian and has lasted too long. A Jayalalitha fan
in Tamil Nadu, who would wait 12 hours for a glimpse of the
leader, does not care two hoots for the Election Commission or
its circular that ``debars'' a ``convicted'' leader. An acolyte
cheerfully puts aside all doubts and reservations, and submits
unreservedly to the charismatic leader's presumed curative power.
On his part, a charismatic leader moves the disinterested voter,
convinces the sullen supporter and re-energises the alienated
cadre to work for the party and its candidates. Charisma is,
thus, much more than and very different from the curiosity that a
filmstar provokes or Ms. Sonia Gandhi evoked the first time she
hit the campaign trail. Charisma helps overcome the limitations
of the party organisation as well as the indifferent record of a
party government. A charismatic leader can be deemed to have
acquired an all-India potency if he/she helps overcome the anti-
incumbency factor, fatigue with the State-level leader, tiredness
with familiar faces at the district level; helps stick a band-aid
over non-performance of regional Governments. Jawaharlal Nehru
performed this task effortlessly for the first 15 years after
Independence; Indira Gandhi did precisely that, at least, till
1977; but Rajiv Gandhi had lost the magic within a year of that
massive 1984 verdict.
Mr. Vajpayee's appeal was not deep enough, for example, in
October 1998, to help neutralise the voters' anger against the
BJP regimes in Delhi and Rajasthan. But the next year he appears
to have made a substantial difference in the electoral fortunes
of the Telugu Desam, the DMK and the Trinamool Congress. Now, for
inexplicable reasons, the Prime Minister's handlers chose to
pitchfork him in Assam where the BJP had limited presence. May be
they though the `Hero of Kargil' had reinforced and deepened his
all-India acceptability. The question, then, is whether the
Vajpayee factor would help lift the BJP-AGP combine to safety.
In the event, Mr. Vajpayee attracted a crowd of less than 2,000
at the Judges' Field in Guwahati. This included policemen, in
uniform and plainclothes, as one newspaper report pointed out.
If Mr. Vajpayee's experience of expanding his acceptability base
was unrewarding, Mr. L.K. Advani had an equally miserable time.
The question was whether three years of stewardship of the Union
Home Ministry, frequent travelling in the entire northeast,
incessant publicity on Doordarshan and All India Radio, would
have value-added to Mr. Advani's profile and stature, yielding a
modicum of acceptability beyond the Hindi-belt, an acceptability
that could keep the fires of prime ministerial ambitions burning.
In the event, Mr. Advani could attract crowds of less than 500 in
Assam.
On the other side of the divide, Ms. Sonia Gandhi was the star
campaigner for the Congress(I). But she avoided Tamil Nadu
altogether, thereby not allowing any evaluation of her charisma.
In fact, party mangers very cleverly confined her visits to
strongholds in Kerala, Assam and West Bengal. The question would
remain unanswered whether she provided any value-addition to the
Congress(I) vote and the pro-Congress(I) sentiment in Assam and
Kerala, a sentiment that is grounded in the perceptions of the
AGP and the LDF regimes' inefficiency and non-performance. In
West Bengal, she and the Congress(I) were happy to play second
fiddle to Ms. Mamata Banerjee.
A charisma count would nonetheless become inevitable in the days
to come. Once the votes get counted, the Sangh Parivar would have
to make a judgment whether the BJP can rely on the Vajpayee
charisma to bail it out of the mess that is Uttar Pradesh. If the
verdict is that the Vajpayee magic is still intact, even if
waning, then the party may be rushed into a judgment towards a
mid-term poll before a post-Vajpayee contingency presents itself.
Over at the AICC, a judgment would be sought to be contrived that
Ms. Sonia Gandhi was after all the vote-catcher she had been
touted to be by her courtiers and intriguers. Such a judgment
could force the Congress(I) into blunders, just as it mistook the
1998 anti-incumbency wave in Delhi and Rajasthan as a
resuscitation of the dynasty's magical potency.
- H.K.
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