Heartland v Maharashtra (and others)

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Students of India's politics often marvel at the resilience of the country's people, the bulk of whom have been made into living parts of the great Indian political experiment – pampered, mauled and often disfigured, and yet surviving to tell the tale of how democratic traditions are deeply rooted. Nothing characterises this saga better than the politics played out in the so-called Hindi heartland, the densely populated area of eastern Uttar Pradesh (Purvanchal) and Bihar. It seems as though every time national stalwarts of various hues reinvent political tradition, these 'heartland' dwellers are selected as the guinea pigs.

First it was the Hindutvavadi-based movement for the Ram Mandir in Ayodhya; then it was the caste-based agitations against the Mandal Commission's recommendations on reservations. Now, with the ports in the west and south on the verge of becoming success stories in a seemingly booming economy, the latest refrain is whether the rest of India should be forced to carry the burden of the impoverished, lawless heartland. It is as if the Indian population has suddenly woken up to the reality of this perennial economic 'drag'.

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