The First Decade
The first decade was a period of steady growth organisationally
and policy evolution and elaboration ideologically.
It took up the issues of territorial integrity like
Kashmir, Kutch and Berubari - and in the process suffered
the martyrdom of its founder-President Dr Mookerjee
in a Kashmir jail. It demanded cow protection as per
Article 48 of the Constitution and Gandhiji's declaration
that "Cow protection is more important than even
Swarajya". It came out against Zamindari and Jagirdari.
It criticised permit-licence-quota Raj. And it came
out for the nuclear option to reinforce national defence.
The 1962 China war and 1965 Pakistan war put Sangh Parivar
on the center-stage as the conscience of the country.
When the RSS Parivar was entrusted with police duties
in 1965, and it performed the same to the satisfaction
of all-even Muslims began to join Jana Sangh. Shri Guruji
was specially invited to the National Integration Council.
General Kulwant Singh said at the time: " Punjab
is the sword arm of India and RSS is the sword arm of
Punjab." In all countries, parties associated
with the freedom movement enjoy long years of power.
So did the Congress - for 20 years. But the 1967 elections
ended the Congress monopoly of power. From Punjab to
Bengal there were non-Congress coalitions everywhere.
As a political wit put it : "You could travel from
Amritsar to Calcutta without setting foot in Congress
territory."
In most of the States Jana Sangh and the Communists
worked together. They seemed to be guided by the dictum:
"We are all children of Bharat mata and we are
all products of the 20th century." However, this
was more than the monopolistic Congress could stand.
It used its vast money power and its capacity for
intrigue to topple government after state government.
But even so Jana Sangh did not lose heart. Under the
leadership of Pt. Deendayal Upadhyaya it held a tremendous
session in Calicut. Here it clarified its language
policy of "All encouragement to all Indian languages"
to the delight of all linguistic groups. The Mathrubhumi,
leading Malayali daily, described the BJS session
"the Ganga flowing South."
However, within days of this historic session Deendayalji
was found murdered near Mugalsarai railway station.
In good faith the BJS asked for a CBI enquiry. But
the way CBI drew blank made it clear that Central
Agency has been politicised and that it would never
unravel political crime.
Although the murder of Deendayalji was a stunning
shock the BJS was too big and too strong to be stopped
in its tracks. Under the leadership of Shri Atal
Behari Vajpayee, it enthusiastically joined the
movement for the liberation of Bangladesh . Its
agitation for a higher procurement price for cereals
gave the country food sufficiency and food security.
Its election manifesto for 1971 was titled "War
on Poverty". The Congress stole that slogan
and Hindi-ised it into "Garibi hatao"
and swept the 1971 and 1972 polls. But once again
Jana Sangh was too good and strong to be overwhelmed
by the ebb and tide of politics.
JP's Response
In election after by-election Jana Sangh showed its
class. It joined hands with Jaya Prakash Narayan
on the issue of fighting corruption and autocracy.
The BJS was in the vanguard of the people's movement
in Bihar and Gujarat . To the professional detractors
of Jana Sangh JP's categorical response was: "If
Jana Sangh is communal then I am also communal."
As the opposition parties won election after by-election,
the cry ran through the country: "Sinhasan
khali karo, ki janata aati hai". A scared Mrs.
Gandhi declared Emergency, arrested thousands and
banned the RSS. But the country survived this agni-pariksha,
thanks again to the Sangh parivar, which contributed
full 80% of Emergency-time prisoners, both detenus
and Satyagrahis.
Mrs. Gandhi was astounded enough to admit in the
Chandigarh Session of the Congress in 1975 that "even
in places where the RSS was an unknown organisation
it has established a firm foothold." The Economist
of London (Dec.4 1970) described the underground movement
of the Sangh parivar as "the only non-left revolutionary
force in the world." And even Marxist parliamentary
party leader Shri AK Gopalan was moved to say about
the Sangh parivar: "There is some lofty idea
which is capable of inspiring such deeds of bravery
and stamina for sacrifices."
As a result of this successful resistance Mrs Gandhi's
Congress Party was trounced in the 1977 elections
and a Janata party government consisting of BJS, BLD,
Cong(O), Socialists and CFD took office. Here Shri
Vajpayee as External Affairs Minister and Shri. L.K
Advani as information and broadcasting minister made
memorable name. But within thirty months this government
went into pieces, thanks to the vaulting ambition
of individual leaders. The Janata experiment miserably
failed.
In the elections that followed the fall of Charan
Singh government, countless crores of foreign money
came into play. The Stateman pointed out on Feb.11,
1980 that the Rupee, which normally sold at a discount
in the world's black markets, now began to sell
at a premium. As against this official rate of Rs
7.91 to a dollar on January 4 the unofficial rate
of Rs 7.20. "Those who keep tabs on money markets
attributed this sudden rise in the black market
value of the Indian currency to big orders from
unknown buyers, believed to include some foreign
governments keen to funnel funds into the election
coffer of the ideological allies and friends in
India". After the elections, in the very first
week of February, 1980, the Indian currency fell
even lower than before, to Rs 8 a dollar to be precise.
While the splintered Janata Party was routed in January
1980, their suicidal "dual memebership"
campaign continued. The BJS component found this situation
impossible, went out and reorganised itself as BHARATIYA
JANATA PARTY. A bright new day had dawned in the chequered
history of India.
The very first session of BJP in December 1980 in
Bombay, presided over by Shri Vajpayee, was a glorious
success. Addressing this session the Grand Old Man
of India, Shri M.C. Chagla, said: "I am not a
member of the party and I am not addressing you as
a delegate. Still I assure you that when I am talking
to you I do not feel like an outsider. I honestly
and sincerely feel that I am one of you. The BJP is
a national party. I admire your discipline, your honesty,
and your dedication. This huge gathering is Bombay's answer to Indira. This is the only party that can
replace Indira."
It was during the Indira Gandhi's second coming that
the country experienced the trauma of Meenakshipuram
and the massacre of Nellie.
However, her worst disservice to the country was
the propping up of Bhindranwale - till then an obscure
granthi - to harass and divide the Akali Dal. To this
day the country has not recovered from that play with
fire, the latest victim of the same being Punjab Chief
Minister Beant Singh.
No less dangerous was her aiding, abeting, arming,
and financing of LTTE which was out to partition a
friendly neighbouring state like Sri Lanka.
And when her political son died in an unfortunate
and mysterious air accident she promptly put up even
her airline pilot son to succeed her and try to pilot
the ship of State.
The BJP, while exposing all these sins of ommission
and commission, continued to consolidate its organisation
and fine-tune its policies. It won election after election in major cities. The general feeling was that Mrs. Gandhi would not be able to
win the next election due early in 1985. And President
Zail Singh was heard saying that in that case he would
not call her to form the Government. It was at this
stage that she was shot dead by enraged Sikhs for
having violated the sanctity of the Golden Temple
in Amritsar. What followed was a titanic tragedy,
costing the lives of thousands of Sikhs and their
property worth some Rs 10,000 crores. The whole carnage
was okayed by the state apparatus, with President
Zail Singh himself ringing up the Delhi BJP leaders
to please save the lives of their Sikh brethern. The
whole gory drama was staged under Mr. Rajiv as PM
and Mr. Rao as Home Minister. No wonder nobody was
punished for this genocide of innocent Sikhs.
The Rajiv Regime
In the elections that followed the sympathy wave
got Mr. Rajiv Gandhi more votes and more seats than
even Pandit Nehru in all his three general elections.
For a while he appeared as Prince Charming on a White
Charger, the 'Mr. Clean', out to purge "power
brokers". However, it soon became clear that
it is much easier to run an election than to run a
country.
He signed an agreement with Shri Longowal of the
Akali Dal, but never implemented it. He signed an
Assam agreement that left millions of Bangla infiltrators
this side of the border. he first welcomed the Supreme
Court judgement in the Shah Bano Case and then proceeded
to negate it. Having done this "favour" to
Muslims he proceeded to organise the unlocking of
the Ayodhya structure in a bid to please the Hindus.
He despatched the army to Sri Lanka only to get a
bloody nose there.
However, the BJP lost no time in preparing for the
next round. It appointed a high power Working Group
to study the results of the 1984 elections and recommend
remedial action. The Party streamlined its organisation.
It re-pledged itself to "Integral Humanism".
It urged early and comprehensive electoral reform.
And it highlighted the problem of massive infiltration
from Bangladesh. Within two years of Rajiv Gandhi's
coming to office the BJP had slapped on him a 50-count
chargesheet. And then came the Bofors scandal.
That a ruling party should make money on Government
contracts was bad enough. But that it should make
money on Defence deals, compromising national defence
was wholly unacceptable to the country. The fat was
in the fire.
In the 1989 elections the Janata Dal effected adjustments
of seats with the BJP and proceeded to form the Government
with outside support from the BJP and the Communists.
From day one Shri VP Singh did not play ball. The
BJP had pledged him unconditional support, which was
probably a mistake; there is no charity in politics;
no free lunch. BJP should have probably made it clear
that it should be consulted on all major issues. But
Mr VP Singh on his part only added insult to injury.
The BJP had made no demand on him whatsoever. But
whenever any of his colleagues suggested some gesture
to be made to BJP he was heard saying: "I do
not have to give them anything; they have no choice."
Evidently the Raja Saheb thought that BJP was his
"bonded labour."
As BJP president Advani was heard remarking at the
time: "Mr VP Singh is like an old-style princeling.
He is all courtesy and all conspiracy". He would
tell Advani that he himself would join him in Kar-Seva
and then issued a temple ordinance only to withdraw
it within hours and have Shri Advani arrested.
Shri VP Singh suddenly came up with the Mandal report,
not because his heart was bleeding for the poor
but because he thought that, on this issue, he could
dissolve the House to go to the polls, collect some
350 seats and rule the country on his own without
the bother of consulting anybody on anything. But
it was a gamble that failed, because the BJP had
already raised the Ayodhya issue. And it had done
so early in 1989, not on the basis of any electoral
calculation, but on ideological conviction. Historic
wrongs had to be righted, however, symbolically,
for a lasting solution of the Hindu-Muslim problem.
Sea Change in political Scene
Shri Advani's Rath Yatra from Somnath to Ayodhya
effected a sea change in the political scene. While
Mandal had divided the people, Ayodhya united the
people. What violence there was in 1990 came only
because the government arrested Shri Advani and the
UP Chief Minister fired on Kar-Sevaks. Had they allowed
Advani to reach Ayodhya and do symbolic Kar-Seva there
would have been no Bandh, no violence, anywhere.
Shri VP Singh thought that BJP had secured 89 seats
in 1989 because of seat adjustment with JD, and that
was true enough. But he forgot that his JD had also
got 143 seats only because of seat adjustment with
the BJP. He now thought that in the absence of seat
adjustment the BJP would lose scores of seats. Actually
the BJP added 30 seats to its old score and it was the JD
that declined to 59 seats. And but for the sudden
killing of Mr Rajiv, which won the Congress scores
of seats, both the BJP and the Congress would have
been around 175 seats. This was particularly remarkable,
because on this occasion the BJP had fought all alone.
It had emerged as the only major solid pole in a fluid
Indian political situation.
In assessing the BJP other parties make a serious
mistake. They forget that as a result of our first-past-the-post
electoral system, the first party has an undue advantage
over No.2 Party. But the BJP, being a solid party
and a solid pole, can always survive adverse winds
and live to thrive another day. In 1984 the BJP had
won only 2 seats, but in terms of vote it was second
only to the Congress. Under a system of proportional
representation its 7.4% vote would have won it 30-40
seats even in 1984. Therefore its win of 89 seats
in 1989 was not all that much of a surprise. Parties
like JD, being loose outfits, are in no position to
survive serious reverses.
This trend has been confirmed in State Assembly elections.
In the 1993 elections the BJP vote and seats declined
in HP and MP thanks to strict administrative measures
for which public opinion had not been prepared in
advance. In UP the party lost its majority due to
a gang-up of all other parties against it, but its
popular vote went up by almost 30% to 34%. In Rajasthan
both our vote and our seats went up. And in Delhi
we got a whopping 61.59% and a three-fourths majority.
In these five major states put together BJP won
a hundred assembly seats and once crore votes more
than the Congress.
The Unstoppable BJP
The results of the 1995 elections in Andhra, Karnataka,
Bihar, Orissa, Goa, Gujarat and Maharashtra were,
if anything, even more remarkable. In Andhra the main
fight being between TDP and the Congress the BJP got
squeezed to just 3 seats. But in Karnataka BJP won
40 seats, pushing the Congress to the third position.
In Goa, for the first time the BJP won 4 seats in
a house of 60. In Orissa BJP trebled its modest strength
from 3 to 10. In Bihar BJP pushed Congress to the
third position and emerged as the official opposition.
In Maharashtra, Shiv Sena and the BJP have formed
a fine coalition government. And in Gujarat the BJP
has won a two-thirds majority. It is trends like these
that have convinced even the detractors of BJP that
the party is now "unstoppable".
Conventional wisdom is that the BJP won 89 Lok Sabha
seats in 1989 as a result of seat adjustments with
JD and 119 seats in 1991 as a result of the Ayodhya
issue. The fact is that these were only contributory
factors. The BJP's historic performance in the recent
assembly elections, when there was no seat adjustment
with other parties and when the Ayodhya issue stood
frozen, is confirmation of the fact that basically
the BJP is forging ahead because of its excellent
organisation, superb leadership and patriotic people's
policies.
When, in 1991, the Congress formed the Government
on its own, even though it did not have a majority
of its own, the BJP acted very responsibly and helped
it have a speaker of its choice, content with deputy
speakership of the Lok Sabha. Having been all along
opposed to a licence-permit-quota Raj it welcomed
the policy of liberalization in principle. At long
last New Delhi recognised Israel and South Africa, something the BJP had urged for long. BJP also took
a far-sighted view of reservations - conceding the
same to OBCs on the basis of an economic criterion,
which translated itself in the Supreme Court judgement
into the "creamy layer".
BJP state governments enunciated a new education
policy; they made copying in exams a cognisable
offence; they decentralized the administration;
their Antyodaya took care of the poorest of the
land; they waived the loans of poor farmers; and
they made war on criminal elements and put them
in jail.
Clear BJP Position
The BJP position is very clear on this issue; Indian
Science and technology have come of age, as examplified
by our Defence and Research Development Organisation
presided over by Dr. Abdul Kalam. Therefore, foreign
capital is welcome only in capital intensive hi-tech
and infrastructural areas, however, it must come on
fair and competitive terms. And because Enron was
an opaque, expensive and dubious deal it has been
cancelled by the BJP-RSS government in Maharashtra. This has protected national interests and upheld national honor. The new watchword is "Swadeshi".
The world has been told in unmistakable terms that
India cannot be taken for granted. The entire third
world feels good about India standing up.
Vindication of the BJP position comes from no less
person than Samual D. Huntington, the US Establishment
ideologue. In his article "The Clash of Civilizations"
(vide Foreign Affairs Quarterly, Summer 1993) he wrote:
"Through the IMF and other international economic
institutions, the West promotes its economic interests
and imposes on other nations the economic policies
it thinks appropriate. In any poll of non-Western
peoples the IMF undoubtedly would win the support
of finance ministers and a few others, but get an
overwhelmingly unfavourable rating from just about
everyone else."
Today, strong foreign pressure, New Delhi's pusillanimity
and nationalist India's strength are all simultaneously
at play in the country. Under foreign pressure our
missile program has been capped. In its timidity the
government has signed an unequal agreement with CNN
and the country is being increasingly served cultural
garbage. But the people of India represented in the
Rajya Sabha have, under the leadership of the BJP,
taken a stand on all these issues. They have also
prevented an anti-national patent law amendment bill
from being passed. And they have acclaimed the cancellation
of the Enron deal. They caused the Star-TV's anti-Gandhi
and anti-national program to stop. And they have made
the government agree to start and close Parliament
session with "Vandemataram". The BJP's Ekta
Yatra under the leadership of Dr Joshi hoisted the
national flag in Srinagar on Republic Day in 1992.
And the BJP's Karnatak unit saw to it that the National
Flag is duly hoisted on the Hubli public ground, which
is used for Namaz on Id-days.
While the Supreme Court faltered on the issue of
Article 356 of the Constitution to dismiss four BJP
governments, it has come out categorically for implementation
of Article 44 of the Constitution, directing the adoption
of a uniform civil code for all citizens of India. It has denounced the embracing of Islam just to
get rid of your wife and/or indulge in bigamy. And
it has struck down the ban on the VHP. Today the BJP
is poised to take a great leap forward.
Calculators think that the arithmetic does not quite
add up to a majority for the BJP. They, however, forget
one thing: elections are not arithmetic; they are
chemistry. Once it becomes clear that the BJP is poised
to forge ahead of all other parties millions of people
who have probably never before voted for it will plump
for it. Regional parties could make a beeline for
it. The UP development where the BJP helped a dalit
lady become Chief Minister 'Ram ne Shabri ko raja
banaya', said a Hindi newspaper headline is a pointer
in this direction.
Until now the TINA (There Is No Alternative) factor
worked in favor of the Congress. Now it works in favour
of the BJP. Having tried state elections in 1967,
support from inside in 1977, and support from outside
in 1989, and found them all wanting, the BJP has,
by a philosophical process of elimination - "neti"
- come to the conclusion that it would be best to
go it alone. The poet's plea for going it alone ("Aikla
Chalo Re") has literally worked wonders for the
BJP.
While the status-quoists may be shaken by this emerging
brave new India, the people of India have every reason
to cheer the emergence of this rejuvenated India with
the promise of Ram Rajya and with Rabindranath Tagore's
prayer for "Eka Dharmarajya hable a Bharate"
(Let there be one Dharma Rajya - a just and moral
order - in India).
Satyameva Jayate .