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Rise of Muslim parties: How will it change Indian politics?

It remains to be seen whether it will reduce the “secular” parties to a zero or force them to recognise their limitations as secular parties and band together.

November 20, 2014 / 17:13 IST
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R JagannathanFirstpost.com

Two equations will decide the politics of the Indo-Gangetic plain in the next three years and beyond, when elections are due in Bihar, West Bengal and Uttar Pradesh, in that order.

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The first equation is M-M=0. The second is M-M=M. The first one is obviously correct mathematically, but the second is not - unless M equals zero. The first M in both equations stands for Mulayam (Singh), Mayawati or Mamata (Banerjee) - or any so-called secular party. The second M in both equations stands for the Muslim vote, which is the becoming the overwhelming swing factor in all three states. The third M in the second equation stands for Modi – he could be a gainer if the Muslim votes tilt away significantly from the “secular” cabal. But this equation will not work if fear of a Modi gain forces parties to realign.

That Muslims will play a decisive role in future elections is dictated by staggeringly favourable demographics in all the big-vote states. According to a leaked report of the 2011 religious census, the Muslim population has risen dramatically in Assam, West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand, Maharashtra and Karnataka. PR Ramesh of Open magazine wrote earlier this year: “The rise in Muslim numbers is most noticeable in Assam, where they were found to make up 34.2 percent of the population in 2011, up by more than 3 percent since 2001. In West Bengal, this religious group’s share rose by almost 2 percent to 27 percent. In Kerala, by 2 percent to 26.6 percent. Uttarakhand has seen a similar rise to 13.9 percent. In UP and Bihar, the increase is about 1 percent, with the Muslim headcount at 19.3 percent and 16.9 per cent respectively. Jharkhand, Delhi and Maharashtra report similar increases, with the 2011 figures rising to 14.5, 12.9 and 11.5 percent respectively, while Karnataka has seen a rise of just below 1 percent to 12.9 percent.”