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Thursday, December 20, 2012

Home NaMo Sweepaya Gujarat Wants Modi, But Does He Want Only Gujarat? His Big Hat-Trick In State Will Fuel Ambitions Of Going National. Will It Be Rahul Vs Modi In 2014?

"You should now get used to hearing me speak in Hindi," Narendra Modi told the adulatory droves, gathered to celebrate his emphatic victory, when they insisted that he speak in Gujarati. 

    The sudden switch to Hindi for someone who spoke in little else but Gujarati throughout the election campaign led to an obvious interpretation—Modi, having scored a hat-trick, was now flashing his fortified claim to be the BJP's choice for prime minister in 2014, setting the stage for a presidentialtype race with Rahul Gandhi in the Lok Sabha polls. 
    Although Modi said he did not plan to camp in New Delhi and would visit the capital only for a day on December 27 for the National Development Council meet, his devotees were already serenading him with "desh ka neta kaisa ho, Narendra bhai jaisa ho" chants. 
    Modi won 115 seats, just a couple short of his previous tally of 117 seats in the 2007 election. Modi's victory came against the backdrop of indifference, even opposition, from a section of the RSS, hostility of an influential and tenacious faction of civil society and the Congress's tacit understanding with BJP rebel Keshubhai Patel who sought to rally his community against the chief minister. 

DECODING THE WIN 

Tireless Campaigner | Modi addressed 250 rallies and reached out to 180 more locations through 3D projections. Sonia Gandhi addressed 7 and Rahul Gandhi 8 election meetings 
Sweeps Urban Seats | Delimitation increased urban seats. BJP won 12 of 16 seats in Ahmedabad, all 12 in Surat, and all 5 in Vadodara 
Safely Home | Modi was perturbed by the surging crowds of women a few months back when the Congress started distributing lakhs of forms to the homeless, promising them subsidized housing. But the results in seats with mainly poor neighbourhoods show the Congress was building 
castles in the air 
Sad-Bhavana | The last assembly had 5 Muslim MLAs, the new one will have only two, both from Cong. The BJP didn't give a ticket to any Muslim 
Turnout Works | The unusually high voter turnout of 71.9% was the key to the BJP's big win. This was 
almost 10% higher than in the previous two assembly polls. Modi told voters to come out and vote for him, not the candidates. The personality cult worked 
Caste Contours Change | Call it social engineering, Modi style. With Leuva Patels swinging away from the BJP, especially under Keshubhai's influence in Saurashtra, the OBCs 
consolidated around the BJP. This was seen as a reaction to the ganging up of the dominant Patels in the countryside 
Exchange Programme | Cong, BJP wrested 30 seats from each other. Cong gained in Saurashtra & N Gujarat, conceded seats to BJP in central and S Gujarat. 5 
ministers lost their seats, but so did Guj Cong president Arjun Modhwadia 
Batting Failure | Armed with a 'bat' as an election symbol, 84-year-old Keshubhai padded up for a match with Modi but flattered to deceive. He retired hurt, scoring only two but managed to inflict some body blows in Saurashtra where the 
BJP slipped by nine seats 
Bharuch Breached | The Congress won no seat in Bharuch district, home turf of Sonia's political secretary Ahmed Patel. Of the five seats, the BJP won four and the JD(U) one. Modi targeted Patel by calling him Ahmed 'Miyan' Patel and mischievously claiming he was the Congress' CM candidate 
Pro-Incumbency | Modi's strategy every time he faced an election was to drop most of the candidates — a good way to fight anti-incumbency at the local level. As the rejects would have switched over to Keshubhai, he decided to repeat most of the candidates and coined the word pro-incumbency 

    Modi is the 13th politician to serve at least 3 consecutive terms as CM. 
Including him, there are 6 such CMs serving at present, including Tarun Gogoi (Assam), Naveen Patnaik (Odisha), Okram Ibobi Singh (Manipur), Manik Sarkar (Tripura) & Sheila Dikshit (Delhi) 
    Gujarat is one of 7 states where Cong has been out of power for at least 20 years. The others are Bihar, Sikkim, Tripura, TN, UP and Bengal (barring a brief stint as junior coalition partner with Trinamool). These 7 states together account for 230 Lok Sabha seats



2002, 2007, 2012...2014? WILL MODI BE BJP'S POSTER BOY IN THE NEXT LOK SABHA POLLS?

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