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HomeNewsOpinionOpinion | Messages for BJP, Congress from MP, Rajasthan, Chhattisgarh verdicts

Opinion | Messages for BJP, Congress from MP, Rajasthan, Chhattisgarh verdicts

The assembly election was the joker in the pack, challenging BJP’s invincibility by claiming that democracy might die of boredom of incumbency at state and national levels if the BJP wins or wins too convincingly.

December 12, 2018 / 16:49 IST
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New Delhi: Congress President Rahul Gandhi arrives to address media after the party's win in Assembly elections of Rajasthan, Chhattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh, at the party headquarters in New Delhi, Tuesday, Dec 11, 2018. (PTI Photo/Kamal Kishore) (PTI12_11_2018_000285B)

Shiv Visvanathan

The results of the recently-concluded assembly elections came as a Christmas gift of sorts for the Congress. The party edged its way to power in Chhattisgarh and Rajasthan and created an unforgettable cliffhanger in Madhya Pradesh, leaving even the optimists incredulous. God seemed to be favouring the Congress this month. The problem is that such numbers are not objective, they are signals to be read in the long run.

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The temporariness of elections is sometimes critical. The results lack a sense of fait accompli. They look more like hypotheses for the future, strategies to be played out than results in the terminal sense. The just-concluded polls had the air of a semi-final in the words of commentators and it has behaved like just that. It indicates possibilities, mumbles encouragements to dominant or passive groups, mutters the possibility of hope but never gives guarantees. Such an election result shuffles the cards a bit to make the game more interesting. In terms of time, it suggests present continuous with surprises is the theme of the hour.

The results as a set of messages conveys meaning at different levels for the future. At the national level it suggests that the BJP’s much-touted myth of invincibility can, like the predictions of the three witches of Macbeth, play havoc. Voter anxiety, violence, the slowness of the economy can all tilt the current windmills. As a result, 2018 is saying 2019 is an open process and should be so in a democracy. It is almost as if the voter concerned with the dullness of politics believes that the Opposition needs a sporting chance. The future becomes a playful political suggestion for just the lively democratic scenario.