HomeNewsOpinionKarnataka Effect: Is BJP mulling a change of electoral strategy in neighbouring Telangana?

Karnataka Effect: Is BJP mulling a change of electoral strategy in neighbouring Telangana?

Until the Karnataka elections, BJP was pushing ahead full steam with a Hindutva agenda spearheaded by its aggressive state president Bandi Sanjay Kumar. But his detractors, mostly ex-TRS and ex-Congress recruits, weren’t convinced this strategy would work. Now the moderates seem to be catching the BJP high command’s attention

May 23, 2023 / 16:36 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Narendra Modi and Amit Shah
Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union Home Minister Amit Shah.(File image)

In the run up to the Telangana state elections, due in the next six to seven months, the BJP had unveiled an ambitious roadmap for a long march in the south by making a giant leap from Karnataka to Telangana, the home turf of its arch rival K Chandrashekar Rao of the Bharat Rashtra Samithi.

Rethink After Karnataka?

Story continues below Advertisement

In his April 23 rally at Chevella in Telangana, Union home minister Amit Shah, considered to be Number 2 in the BJP hierarchy, had said the countdown for the KCR regime has begun. In a move to trigger a consolidation of the Hindu vote, Shah stated that the BJP, if it would win the state elections, would scrap the four percent quota for Muslim minorities currently under implementation in education and employment. The quota was introduced by the then Congress government of undivided Andhra Pradesh headed by YS Rajasekhar Reddy in 2004.

But the Karnataka poll outcome has upset the BJP’s applecart. Its gateway to the south has been lost. The setback, which was mainly attributed to the common man’s bread and butter issues taking precedence over BJP’s core political strengths of aggressive nationalism and Hindu consolidation, has obviously got the party’s thinktank to do soul-searching over the workability of its core ideology on the soils of neighbouring Telangana.