HomeNewsIndiaBJP’s Collective Leadership Gambit: Ring out the old, ring in the new 

BJP’s Collective Leadership Gambit: Ring out the old, ring in the new 

Despite elections turning presidential, BJP has adopted a collegial style of leadership for the coming state elections. The top brass – comprising PM Modi and HM Amit Shah – believe this will throw up leaders capable of helming these states for the next decade and lead to rewards for hard-working party apparatchiks down the ladder

September 29, 2023 / 15:06 IST
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BJP
BJP’s foremost lesson from the Karnataka debacle was to eliminate the scope for any state leader to project himself or herself as a chief ministerial contender in the run-up to the five assembly elections. (Source: PTI/File)

The Bharatiya Janata Party is known for minute analysis of poll outcomes, irrespective of victory or loss. The defeat in Karnataka was a rude shock for the BJP. Not just the loss, the BJP leadership was jolted by the scale of the drubbing.

Away from the public glare, the BJP top brass examined the Karnataka loss deeply, and has come around to a view that the party could not address the leadership issue effectively.

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The Karnataka Effect

The conclusion was that feuding state leaders had wiped out the objectives of the bold experiment of fielding a large number of candidates under 50 years of age. The BJP’s gambit to negate the anti-incumbency factor by dropping incumbent legislators and fielding ordinary workers to fuel their political aspirations had come unstuck. Even while Prime Minister Narendra Modi led the electioneering, and Union home minister Amit Shah held the ground in Karnataka, the BJP’s tally dipped sharply in the state assembly.