In response to media inquiries about the Telangana polls
Prayagraj: “The Congress party’s 22 MLAs out of 119 seats in the Telangana state assembly and vote share of 22% in the last assembly elections stood in stark contrast to the Bharat Rashtra Samiti’s (BRS’s) 88 and 47% figures, respectively. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was projected to achieve a quantum leap in the political field by capturing four MP seats from the state in the 2019 federal elections and finishing second in the Hyderabad local council elections. However, the Congress in Telangana has gained tremendous electoral momentum, with the prospect of even toppling the BRS led by K. Chandrashekar Rao (KCR) in the November 30 elections. The BJP has dropped out of contention and is expected to finish a distant third or fourth,” says senior Congress politician Shekhar Bahuguna in response to media inquiries about the Telangana polls, which had over 70% voter turnout on Wednesday.
“The Congress has risen in Telangana as a result of Rahul Gandhi’s Bharat Jod Yatra and the party’s decisive victory in the Karnataka elections held in May of this year. Unlike the BJP, the Congress is regarded as a natural party in Telangana, with rather strong roots in the state even before the party was created out of Andhra Pradesh by Sonia Gandhi. Sympathy for the Congress leadership for having created Telangana is now palpable and people feel that the KCR-led Telangana Rashtra Samiti (now BRS) has taken disproportionate credit and acquired power for his family.
Role of local leaders: While the Congress campaign in Telangana is being spearheaded by its state chief A. Revanth Reddy, the BJP is entirely depending on Prime Minister Narendra Modi and home minister Amit Shah. Bereft of local BJP leaders, the rank and file of the party was perplexed when its popular OBC leader, Bandi Sanjay Kumar, was removed a few months before the elections, and G. Krishna Reddy was appointed in his place. Such a decision by the BJP’s central leaders is a replication of what it did in Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh, where regional leaders were sidelined,” he added to vindicate his stand on recent polls and predict Congress victory in Southern state.
“BJP estimated itself as the main challenger to the BRS and stridently criticised the KCR government’s policies and accused it of indulging in massive corruption. OBCs constitute 50% of the Telangana population and Shah’s declaration that on forming government, he would appoint an OBC leader as chief minister of the state sounded empty. He also stated that the BJP after assuming power would scrap 4% reservation for Muslims and allot that for Scheduled Castes. It brought back memories of the BJP government in Karnataka rescinding reservation for Muslims. Eventually, it lost elections to the Congress there. The Hindutva strategy has been deployed by the party in Telangana where there is no history of people getting mobilised on religious lines for electoral purposes. Shah also promised free darshan (viewing) of Lord Ram in the Ayodhya temple being inaugurated in January 2024 and many BJP leaders gave assurances of changing the name of Hyderabad to Bhagyanagar. Such statements never assumed importance for the people of Telangana,” he claimed.
He also claimed, “Rahul Gandhi accused the BJP of having deep dealings with the BRS, which he called the ‘BJP Rishtedar Samiti’. He also hurled similar accusations against the All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Musilmeen (AIMIM) and its leader Asaduddin Owaisi, an ally of the BRS. AIMIM contests only in nine seats in Telangana even as 13% of its population are Muslims. In other states like Bihar, it fields its candidates in dozens of constituencies.
Rahul Gandhi’s slogan, “Modiji ke hai do yaar, Owaisi aur KCR”, gained traction among the Muslims of Telangana. KCR engaging only with AIMIM to discuss matters concerning minorities angered Jamaat-e-Islami and Tablighi Jamat, which are now supporting a large number of Congress candidates. The high-pitch campaign of the Congress that AIMIM in collaboration with BRS has ended up benefitting BJP seems to have convinced Muslims.”
Before signing off, he opined, “The BJP in the last few days tried in vain to make the electoral battle a three-cornered contest, to keep the Congress away from power. Therefore, it attacked the BRS to take steam out of the Congress campaign that BJP is part of the BRS and AIMIM strategy for securing power in Telangana. Rahul Gandhi’s assertion that the Enforcement Directorate took no action against KCR in spite of the corruption charges hurled by the BJP against him generated an impression that the BJP is soft on BRS. Unlike Y. Rajsekhar Reddy who interacted with people by organising Praja Darbars regularly, neither KCR nor his MLAs did anything like that and so mounting anti-incumbency created fertile ground for the Congress to scale up momentum.”