Moneycontrol
HomeNewsOpinionPolitics | The next government must address the problems Assam is facing

Politics | The next government must address the problems Assam is facing

For decades the Congress failed to meet the basic needs of the people; in the past few years the BJP has also disappointed the people of Assam.

May 15, 2019 / 16:28 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Assam Chief Minister Sarbananda Sonowal cast his vote at a polling station in Dibrugarh. (Image: Twitter/@ANI)

Nazimuddin Siddique

With just one phase of polling remaining in the seven-phase general election, all eyes are on May 23, the day the results will be announced. Assam too went to the polls over three phases: on April 11, 18 and 23. Three main political parties contested: The Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP), the Congress and the All India United Democratic Front (AIUDF). The BJP has formed a pre-poll gathbandhan with regional parties that include the Asom Gana Parishad (AGP) and the Bodo Peoples Front (BPF). Until the 2014 Lok Sabha polls, where it won seven of the 14 seats, the BJP has never been successful in Assam.

Story continues below Advertisement

Assam has a complex and deeply heterogeneous society, with different communities having varied priorities. However, across the decades, Assam has been witnessing elections that are fought and hotly contested only over a single issue — ‘illegal immigrants’. The BJP understood this pulse of a major section of the people of Assam, and used it to its advantage in a convincing manner.

To exploit the constructed xenophobic fear of a major section of Asomiyas, the BJP designed a slogan —‘jati, mati, bheti’ (community, land, base) which gained substantial ground. The party assured to protect ‘jati, mati, bheti’ from ‘illegal immigrants’, and this assurance, compounding with the anti-incumbency factor against Congress, won the BJP seven of the 14 Lok Sabha seats in 2014.