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Eye to the Future: Modi Snubs RSS to Reap Rewards in UP Elections

The reshuffle and Modi’s snubbing of those pushing the RSS’ agenda in government is with a view to the UP election.

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A day before Ram Shankar Katheria, the Minister of State for Human Resource Development (HRD), was sacked, he had said that there was nothing wrong with the saffronisation of education.

He was articulating the long-standing agenda of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), which the Hindu patriarchs have been peddling ever since Murli Manohar Joshi was the HRD minister in Atal Behari Vajpayee’s government.

But now, not only Katheria but even Joshi’s feisty successor, Smriti Irani, have been relieved of their charge and in Irani’s case, moved to the less glamorous textiles ministry.

If any message was delivered to the RSS, it was that its pet project of rewriting textbooks in accordance with its antediluvian ideas cannot be implemented via its “moles” in the government and the party, like Dinanath Batra, who led the crusade against American scholar Wendy Doniger’s book on Hinduism, and the new kid on the saffron block, former model and actress Smriti Irani.

The  reshuffle and Modi’s snubbing of those pushing the RSS’ agenda in government is with a view to the UP election.
File photo of former HRD Minister Smriti Irani. (Photo: PTI)
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It is a measure of the significance of Irani’s “demotion” in the cabinet reshuffle that her removal hogged the headlines although in the normal course of things, the HRD ministry does not rank as high as finance or external affairs. But given the education sector’s value to the RSS, Narendra Modi probably had no option but to pointedly distance Delhi from Nagpur, where the RSS has its headquarters.  

But reasserting the government’s control over education might not have been the sole consideration for the change. Of greater importance was the need to send the signal that ineptitude and courting controversies were not the way forward for any minister.

Irani was guilty of both. Having had no experience of campus life (she had studied only up to Class XII), she made a mess of the unrest among students in Hyderabad Central University (HCU) and Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU).

The  reshuffle and Modi’s snubbing of those pushing the RSS’ agenda in government is with a view to the UP election.
Students agitating for the release of Students’ Union President Kanhaiya Kumar at JNU. (Photo: PTI)

What is worse, she palpably played to the tune of the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) in the two universities, which were described by saffronites as “dens” of anti-national activists. Her need as a newcomer to the saffron camp to keep the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) students wing in good humour was evidently behind her ill-advised interventions in campus “politics”.

The  reshuffle and Modi’s snubbing of those pushing the RSS’ agenda in government is with a view to the UP election.
Rohith Vemula was a member of the Ambedkar Students’ Association. (Photo: Altered by The Quint)
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The fact that the new HRD Minister Prakash Javdekar has emphasised the importance of dialogue in dealing with students is a sign that Modi wants an about-turn in the policies of the ministry.

But this particular initiative is not the only indication that Modi has decided to call the shots vis-a-vis the RSS. As is evident, he has succeeded in ensuring that the Ram temple issue will remain on the back burner, the ghar wapsi and love jihad campaigns will be called off and even the RSS chief, Mohan Bhagwat, will refrain from reiterating that all Indians are basically Hindus.

The  reshuffle and Modi’s snubbing of those pushing the RSS’ agenda in government is with a view to the UP election.
RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat. (Photo: Reuters)
The snubbing of Subramanian Swamy also shows that Modi has no time for those who seemingly utilise their supposed proximity to the RSS to chart their own course on sensitive issues.

What effect these measures will have on the BJP-RSS relations, only time will tell. Will the RSS hold back its cadres during the election campaign in Uttar Pradesh, which is of supreme importance to Modi?

As the reshuffle has shown, Modi’s focus is now wholly on the most populous state. He is apparently interested more in upstaging Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) leader Mayawati than Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav, considering that of the 19 new entrants in the ministry, five are Dalits.

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Arguably, the BJP is banking on Akhilesh Yadav sinking under the weight of the anti-incumbency factor. Hence the targeting of mainly the BSP although it, too, is currently not in the pink of health in view of internal dissensions.

The million-dollar question is whether Modi’s pitch for development will succeed in edging out the saffron militants who constitute a legion in the state, led by Yogi Adityanath. Any headway by the prime minister in this respect will mark a sea-change in the political scene. It has to be remembered that the BJP’s extraordinary success in the parliamentary polls, when it won 73 out of 80 seats in the state, including two by Apna Dal, was based entirely on support for Modi’s economic programme. To repeat the feat, the BJP has to sideline the Yogi Adityanaths, which means the RSS.

Much will depend on how the refurbished cabinet functions. After the “shock” of Irani’s marginalisation, one can sense a new awareness among the ministers about delivering results. A similar urgency was there when Modi first took charge, but it gradually disappeared and was replaced by either a lackadaisical attitude or individual enterprise, which was not always well directed.

For the frequent flyer prime minister, it is make-or-break time. If he can pull it off in Uttar Pradesh, success in 2019 will be virtually assured. Success will also mean that he will be one-up on the RSS, a secret ambition of front-ranking BJP leaders from Vajpayee’s time.

(Amulya Ganguly is a political commentator. This column has been published in an arrangement with IANS.)

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Topics:  Narendra Modi   RSS   Uttar Pradesh 

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