The Tajinder Bagga Guidebook to Becoming Delhi BJP’s Spokesperson

Five ways in which Bagga transitioned from a headline-seeking fringe group element to mainstream politics.
Aviral Virk
Politics
Updated:
Tajinder Pal Singh Bagga with Prime Minister Modi at 7 RCR. (Photo: Facebook/Tajinder Singh Pal Bagga)
Tajinder Pal Singh Bagga with Prime Minister Modi at 7 RCR.  (Photo: Facebook/<a href="https://www.facebook.com/TajinderPalSinghBagga/photos/">Tajinder Singh Pal Bagga</a>)
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A Swayam Sevak, an Art of Living follower and a Bhagat Singh bhakt – Tajinder Pal Singh Bagga is the new BJP spokesperson for Delhi.

Step 1: Bash Someone Up and Make It to Arnab’s 9 PM Debate

He’s also the man who launched ‘Operation Prashant Bhushan’ in October 2011. It entailed barging into the lawyer-activist’s Supreme Court chambers, slapping and punching the lawyer in the face, pinning him to the ground, repeatedly kicking him in the face and chest, and tearing his shirt while abusing him for his “separatist” remarks.

One of the core members of Team Anna, Bhushan had called for a referendum on Kashmir, sparking a political fight between the Congress and the BJP, with each accusing Team Anna of being the other’s “B-team”.

An outfit called the Bhagat Singh Kranti Sena claimed credit for the attack that was inadvertently streamed live on a TV channel that was interviewing Bhushan at the time.

Step 2: Become a Social Media Influencer

The head of the outfit, Tajinder Pal Bagga, tweeted – “he try to break my Nation, i try to break his head. Hisab chukta. Congrats to all. operation Prashant Bhushan successful [sic].”

Since then, Bagga has amassed 197K followers on Twitter.

In 2015, he was among the #Super150 – a group of social media influencers greeted by Modi at 7 RCR on the sidelines of the Digital India launch in July 2015.

Larry Price, who documented Modi’s 2014 election campaign in his book ‘The Modi Effect’, quotes Bagga on his efforts to make Modi more relatable to the youth.

Tajinder Pal Singh Bagga had represented the party’s youth wing on the BJP national executive for four years when he decided more should be done to make politics, and Modi in particular, more attractive to younger voters. “If you see the scenario two years back,” he told me, “When you spoke with the youth, they would say ‘I am not interested, everybody is a thief’. But they saw a ray of hope in Modi.” Having watched Bruce Springsteen perform for Barack Obama, he and some friends staged a small rock concert. Concerts need t-shirts and these too, were a deliberate attempt to co-opt the Obama campaign, although with a very Indian twist. ‘We launched T-shirts because there were many people blaming Modi for the 2002 riots,’ said Bagga. “The first T-shirt was a quote from Modi, ‘India First is my definition of Secularism’. And the second T-shirt had Modi’s face with the tagline, ‘Face of Development’.”
Bagga with Sri Sri Ravi Shankar. (Photo Courtesy: Facebook/Tajinder Pal Singh Bagga)
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Step 3: Hunt and Harass “Anti-Nationals”

Over the six years since then, the Bhagat Singh Kranti Sena has orchestrated a number of altercations: They barged into an event to launch Arundhati Roy’s ‘Broken Republic’, calling her essays “anti-Indian Army and pro-Kashmir azaadi”; they heckled Syed Ali Shah Geelani at an event organised by the Centre for Study of Developing Studies in Delhi; the fringe group also locked the Jammu & Kashmir House in Delhi to demand the Amarnath Yatra be extended by 120 days; and they disrupted a rally organised by the Popular Front of India “because they perpetrate love jihad.”

Step 4: Don’t Forget to Call a TV News Crew

Bagga rose from a fringe group element known for threatening violence against voices of dissent to a mainstream face of Delhi’s BJP unit. He was known to make phone calls to TV news journalists, informing them well in advance about his intent to disrupt and assault in order to get coverage.

Bagga claims to be a fierce supporter of the Indian Army. (Photo Courtesy: Facebook/Tajinder Pal Singh Bagga)
Bagga with Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh. (Photo Courtesy: Facebook/Tajinder Pal Singh Bagga)

Step 4: Some Crowd Pleasing

Bagga is also the editor of NaMo Patrika – an online portal started by the Bhagat Singh Kranti Sena to highlight schemes and initiatives launched by the Modi government.

Bagga’s proximity to the RSS and several BJP leaders is being seen as the reason for his elevation to the post of Delhi spokesperson. His profile could be useful to the party in attracting the youth and the Sikh vote in the MCD elections to be held on 22 April.

(At The Quint, we are answerable only to our audience. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member. Because the truth is worth it.)

Published: 15 Mar 2017,05:52 PM IST

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