On the eve of the prolific victory of Narendra Modi in Gujrat elections, it is tempting for the Bhopali to wonder what happened to the widely popular firebrand BJP leader from Madhya Pradesh. There is no denying that the leadership question in the BJP from among the second-generation leaders has been settled with the verdict. Modi is the first one who has emerged from the second row to a place in the front row, and it is only a matter of time that he may occupy the corner seat representing the supreme leader. Uma Bharti, the only other mass leader among the second-generation, has been left far behind. By her flip-flops in Gujarat, she has damaged her position considerably.
For a quick background check, Uma Bharati was born at Dunda village in Tikamgarh district on May 3, 1959, Bharti started giving religious discourses at the age of five, having attained mastery over the teachings of the Gita and the Ramayana. With six siblings, the prodigal daughter of a peasant family belonging to the backward Lodh community, she was raised under the care of the late Rajmata Vijayaraje Scindia of Gwalior. Bharti traveled across the country and to 75 countries across the world to 'broaden her horizon' from the age of 16. Uma has told people close to her that she has two identities. One belongs to a Sadhu who saved her life (and died the very same day) when she was three. He is the Sanyasi within her, who made her give religious discourses. Having decided early not to marry and remain wedded to Hindutva. She also became closely associated with RSS, VHP and other saffron organizations. Bharti first contested Lok Sabha elections from Khajuraho at the age of 25, but lost in the post-Indira Gandhi assassination sympathy wave in 1984. She soon became one of the beacon lights of the Ram Janambhoomi movement and in 1988 was made Vice-President of the Madhya Pradesh unit of BJP. Riding the Ram wave, she won the Lok Sabha election from Khajuraho in 1989. She went on to retain the seat four times consecutively in 1991, 1996 and 1998. She contested and won from Bhopal in 1999. An accused in the Babri demolition case along, with BJP president L K Advani and senior leader Murli Manohar Joshi, she had reportedly egged Kar Sewaks on December 6, 1992 saying, 'ek dhakka aur do, Babri Masjid tod do' (give ano ther push and demolish Babri mosque). However, she denies this.
Appointed President of BJP youth wing, Bharatiya Janata Yuva Morcha, she came to be associated with then party ideologue K N Govindacharya. When the National Democratic Alliance came to power, she was made Minister of State for Human Resource Development under Murli Manohar Joshi. When brought back to the Vajpayee ministry, she subsequently handled the portfolios of tourism, youth affairs and sports and coal and mines. Recognizing her oratorical and organizational skills, BJP had projected her as its chief ministerial candidate in Madhya Pradesh Assembly elections in 2003. Leading the party to a thumping victory, Bharti, who was elected to the Assembly from Bara Malehra, became the state's first woman chief minister and the first from the Bundelkhand region.
However, within a few months of her becoming the chief minister, the power brokers of the state started feeling the heat. It has been always a cozy relationship between the ruling and opposition parties of Madhya Pradesh assembly. The latter had always come to the aid of the chief minister in times of crisis. In return, the opposition leaders enjoyed powers far beyond those of the cabinet ministers. Vikram Verma, now a Rajya Sabha member and vice-president of the BJP, was the Leader of the Opposition during Digvijay Singh's first term. Not even once did he raise an issue, inside the Assembly or outside, which could discomfit the Chief Minister. Present PCC chief Subhash Yadav was one of the ministers constantly nagging Digvijay Singh. One day in the Assembly, Verma demanded Yadav's resignation or his dismissal from the cabinet in view of the Lokayukta finding that he (Yadav) had made illegal appointments in the Apex Bank (Yadav was chairman of the Apex Bank also). There was quite a ruckus in the Assembly. The Lokayukta had not yet finalised his finding but had written to the Chief Minister, seeking the government' comments. No special intelligence is required to guess where Verma got his ammunition against Yadav. The inevitable outcome was that Yadav surrendered to the Chief Minister. The tradition of "constructive" cooperation between the Chief Minister and the Leader of the Opposition started during Arjun Singh's time in the early eighties. He enjoyed, and still enjoys, almost legendary friendship with veteran BJP leader Sunderlal Patwa who was the Leader of the Opposition during Arjun Singh's term. Arjun Singh had, among other things, turned a blind eye to the activities of Mohammad Shafi, a notorious narcotics smuggler from Mandsaur and a close friend of Patwa. (Shafi was last heard to be in a Tamil Nadu jail a few years ago). When Patwa became the Chief Minister in 1990, Shyama Charan Shukla was the Leader of the Opposition, but the Congress MLAs were mostly from the Arjun Singh camp. So, Patwa had smooth sailing till his government was dismissed after the Babri Masjid demolition. Contrary to this long tradition, Uma Bharati, who was the chief minister for nine months, did not appear to be inclined to seek friendship with the Congress. She had rather struck a terror in the hearts of the Congress leaders. As if with a vengeance, she had started taking on the senior bureaucrats who had played Digvijay Singh's game. She had directed her full attention to the cooperative sector, stinking with corruption, which had been controlled by Congress leaders for ages and had been a major source of funds for them. Her Minister of Cooperatives Gopal Bhargava had the brief to expedite investigations and prosecute the culprits. An important Congress leader, a protégé of Arjun Singh, was on the verge of being sent to jail when the pressure was brought on Bhargava through predictable channels to go slow in the matter but he, with the support of Uma Bharati, resisted. The things eased with Uma Bharati's exit. Babulal Gaur, who succeeded her, was only too happy to oblige the Congress leaders. So he took away the cooperative portfolio from Bhargava and gave it to Himmat Kothari, a Patwa man. Digvijay Singh had an equally cosy relationship with Babulal Gaur who had become the Leader of the Opposition during Singh's second term.Gaur, in fact, had an excellent relationship with most of the Congress leaders including Arjun Singh and Kamal Nath. When he became the Chief Minister after Uma Bharati's resignation in the wake of the Hubli court case, Gaur was so frequently hobnobbing with the Congress leaders that his own party men dubbed him as the Congress chief minister of the BJP government.
Uma Bharati resigned as the CM in August 2004, on the issue of the right to hoist the National Flag, when a decade old case against her was resurrected. The party was relieved that Chief Minister N Dharam Singh gave it a convenient excuse to ease Bharti out of Bhopal. Party bigwigs were none too happy with Bharti's style of functioning, her extraconstitutional aides who claimed to act on her behalf, and her whimsical ways. Senior ministers and BJP leaders in Madhya Pradesh were biding their time waiting for an appropriate occasion. The non-bailable warrant issued by a Hubli court came as a godsend. As for Bharti, being a free-spirited sanyasin, the nitty-gritty of running the administration of an economically backward state was annoying for someone who likes to keep her politics simple. So when the ruling United Progressive Alliance stalled Parliament seeking her removal after a non-bailable warrant was issued against her in connection with a 14-year-old case, involving her hoisting the national flag on Independence Day at the disputed Idgah maidan in Hubli, she took the wind out of its sails by promptly tendering her resignation. Now basking in the glory of being a martyr defending the national flag, she does not appear to have noticed that the BJP leadership was only looking for an appropriate occasion to remove her. Uma Bharti wondered if she was wrong in resigning as chief minister to appear in a Hubli court. A sulking Uma, in November 2004, was suspended from the Bharatiya Janata Party "till further action" and served a show-cause notice asking why she should not be expelled following her outburst against Mr Lal Krishna Advani, in full glare of Television cameras. However, due to RSS pressure, her suspension was revoked and in May 2005, she was appointed as a member of the party's national executive. Later in the year, she was expelled from the BJP when she revolted against the appointment of Mr Shivraj Singh Chauhan as the Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh. Post expulsion, she undertook a Herculean 'padyatra' from Bhopal to Ayodhya and called it the Ram Roti Yatra (spiritual journey for Rama and bread). With her youthful, smiling face and the garb of a sanyasin, she drew large crowds, particularly of the youth and women, as she traversed through the interior of Madhya Pradesh on her Bhopal to Ayodhya Ram-Roti yatra. They came to have her darshan and touch her feet rather than hear her harangues against the BJP leaders for denying her the Chief Minister's post, which she considered as her right. She did not spare even Atal Behari Vajpayee and Lal Krishna Advani. The media followed her for several days, keeping her constantly in focus. While making angry outbursts against the BJP leaders, she continued to nurse the hope that they would call her back. Accordingly, she continued to extend deadlines for a reply from the BJP leadership. It did not come. Soon the crowds started thinning out and the media also gave her up. Of the 100 and odd BJP MLAs, who she had always claimed were with her, only five had followed her. Then came another disaster. Her candidates lost in all the by-elections held in Madhya Pradesh. More disgraceful was the defeat of her candidate in Bada-Malehra which is her own constituency.
Then on, the downward spiral of her career remains unabated. She has lost almost all by-elections her Bharatiya Janashakti Party (BJS) has contested. Most of the people who joined her party have left for BJP, including Madanlal Khurana. She has withdrawn her candidates from UP assembly elections, following a directive from RSS. She tried to do the same for Gujrat elections, where she was serving as the focal point of rebel activities of BJP. The thumping win of BJP in Gujarat has dashed Uma Bharati's last hope of getting back into the mainstream politics. Her position has become untenable even in her own Bharatiya Jana Shakti (BJS) owing to her constant flip-flop. Knowing fully well the BJP's high stakes in the Gujarat Assembly elections, Uma Bharati first announced her determination to defeat the BJP there. She changed her tack following an "advice" from her spiritual guru Visveshtiratha Swami of Pejavaradhokshaja Mutt to work for consolidation of the Hindutva forces and declared that the BJP everywhere was devoid of principles except in Gujarat and Chief Minister Narendra Modi was her elder brother. The urgency with which she had responded to the guru's appeal for unity was not there in the response of the BJP leaders. In an apparent bid to make herself acceptable to the BJP, she appealed to her party candidates to withdraw from the contest but was shouted down by them.
There are considerable similarities between the two mass based second generation leaders of BJP, although one failed miserably and one suceeded spectacularly. Narendra Modi and Uma Bharati both are very good orators, and largely have a mass base among the local populace. Both are considerd personally incorruptible. However, Narenrdra Modi has be en very vigilant to be seen as incorruptible relating to his day to day activity, while Uma Bharatis brother Swami Lodhi was seen in the power lanes when she was Chief Minister. While Modi has cultivated his strengths acidulously by nurturing his constituency, vote bank and his state, knowing that he requires a solid base to jump into bigger arena, Uma Bharati had taken her mass base for granted and has been left in a nowhere zone. Modi has been able to put in place the power brokers seeking to protect their domain, the temperamental Uma miserably failed. It was easy to provoke Sanyasin Uma Bharati, not a typical politician of India, always touchy about mother India and Hindutva. The last has however not been heard yet.
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