The mild pro-Congress undercurrent

Published on

The verdict is in, but the mandate is still hazy. If the verdict is loud and clear, the weak and hesitant voice of the mandate does not lend itself to simple headlines. It is easier to say what this mandate is not. And it is important to say so, for there is a real risk that the peoples' mandate could be misread or hijacked.

Clearly, this decision by Indian voters during the 15th Lok Sabha elections cannot be explained by the standard old formulae that we have gotten used to hearing. This is not simply an aggregation of state-level verdicts; there is a clear national trend here. In almost every state, the Congress party has finished at the upper end of whatever reasonable range of performance it was capable. Everyone is talking about its performance in Uttar Pradesh, but no less important is the fact that the Congress has crossed the 10 percent threshold in Bihar; and has done much better than expected in states such as Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat, where its party organisation is in shambles; or in Maharashtra, where the party's government leaves much to be desired. A verdict like this cannot be explained merely by local-level factors such as selection of candidates and party factionalism. Or else, Congress would not have performed so well in Rajasthan and Haryana.

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Himal Southasian
www.himalmag.com