Saturday, May 15, 2010

[ZESTCaste] Rahul Gandhi and the Dalit votebank in Uttar Pradesh

 

http://kafila.org/2010/05/10/rahul-gandhi-and-the-dalit-votebank-in-uttar-pradesh

Rahul Gandhi and the Dalit votebank in Uttar Pradesh

This article by Shivam Vij has appeared in the Economic and Political Weekly.

On 14 April this year party general secretary Rahul Gandhi launched
the Congress' biggest campaign to revive itself since 1989. The date
was carefully chosen, Ambedkar Jayanti, because he is trying to win
over dalit votes in Uttar Pradesh (UP). In 1989 the Congress' support
base in UP was made up of a rainbow coalition of brahmins, Muslims and
dalits. The Congress has to woo these communities again to regain
power in UP.

The brahmin community took to the now ruling Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP)
in small numbers in the 2007 Vidhan Sabha election primarily because
there was no strong brahmin leader after Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)
leader Atal Behari Vajpayee became politically inactive. Brahmins see
in Rahul Gandhi a potential "brahmin" leader. The UP Congress
president, legislative leader and Youth Congress president in the
state are all from the brahmin community.

Muslim support is no longer enchained to the Samajwadi Party (SP)
because their bete noire, the BJP, is powerless these days in both the
centre and the state. As a result the Muslim vote is being fought for,
as a three-way contest between BSP, SP and Congress. BSP head and
Chief Minister Mayawati's stratagem is to therefore change her party's
core support base constructed out of the "brahmin-dalit" alliance into
a Muslim-dalit alliance.

The dalits, wooed away en masse by the Kanshi Ram-Mayawati duo of the
BSP for years, would be the hardest to win back for the Congress. In
fact, a year ago the very idea would have sounded ludicrous. But
today, Mayawati's angry reaction to the Congress' bid to woo dalits is
indication that the Congress may be winning over dalits. How is this
happening?

There are 66 dalit castes in UP. Together they make up 21% of UP's
population. According to the 2001 Census, among these communities,
Jatavs – formerly known as the Chamar community – alone constitute 56%
of the scheduled caste (SC) population. The Pasis constitute 16% while
the third rung, comprising Dhobis, Koris and Balmikis, another 15%.
The fourth rung, comprising Gonds, Dhanuks, and Khatiks constitute
about 5%.

It was easy for the BSP to win over the Jatavs – Mayawati belongs to
this community – but other dalits would have to be wooed by them as
well. For that the BSP, in its formative and later stages in UP,
organised social movements to bring different dalit castes together,
regardless of the hierarchies and prejudices within them. The biggest
achievement on this front was to unite Pasis with Jatavs within the
party structure.

The Pasis are concentrated mainly in the Awadh region of central UP.
Traditionally, Pasis have been perceived as being lathi-wielding
guards of zamindars. The Jatavs would often be at the receiving end of
that lathi. The Pasis have willy-nilly aligned themselves with the BSP
but they always feel like second-class citizens of a Jatav movement.
Some Pasis vote for the SP and BJP too, but most find themselves even
more neglected there.

Wooing Other Dalits

If at all the Congress can win dalit votes, it cannot be those of
Jatavs who are wedded to the BSP like horse and carriage. But the
Congress has some hope of winning over non-Jatav dalit votes,
especially those of Pasis. There were indications of this in the 2009
Lok Sabha elections. According to Lokniti-CSDS data, the Congress won
4% of Jatav votes (as opposed to 2% in 2007), whereas it improved its
non-Jatav tally from 5% to 16%.

Addressing the Congress' student wing National Students' Union of
India (NSUI) workers at the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) on 30
September 2009, Rahul Gandhi said he goes to meet poor people and it
is the media that labels them dalits or adivasis. A week later he
repeated this in Thiruvananthapuram: "I ask my office to arrange for
my visit to a poor man's home in the poorest village. You see him as a
dalit. I see him as a poor person."

So by his own admission these visits – which have included dining and
staying overnight at dalits' houses – are pre-arranged.

On 15 March 2008, Rahul Gandhi visited a dalit family in an Etawah
village whose five members had been killed by dacoits. They were
Jatavs. Next month, Rahul Gandhi visited Ghisauli village in Jhansi,
and when told by dalits that fleeting visits did not help, he returned
a week later and took a delegation of 300 dalits to the district
commissioner to demand fair wages under the National Rural Employment
Guarantee Act (NREGA). The dalits were Jatavs, known there as
"ahirwal". After the event, the dalits he met, including Shanti Devi
whom he had a meal with, told reporters they would still vote for
Mayawati, and were shown worshipping a photo of the chief minister on
TV. There is no separating Jatavs from Mayawati and her party.

Soon thereafter, on 17 May 2008, Rahul Gandhi took the residents of
Banpurwa village by surprise and went straight to a meeting of a
women's self-help group that provides microfinance under a scheme
named after Rajiv Gandhi. Rahul chatted there for two hours and then
asked one of them for dinner. Her name? Rekha Pasi.

On 25 October 2008, Rahul Gandhi was denied permission to address
students at a university in Kanpur. He went to rural schools where, he
himself later said, he singled out the backbenchers, who were dalits,
for interaction. Then in a speech he gave before the visit ended, he
said, "People from different sections of the society are being
exploited as votebanks. If the trend continues, it will become a major
challenge for the country."

In January 2009, Rahul Gandhi accompanied the British foreign
secretary to a dalit village in Amethi to show him the "strength" of
India. In Simra village, he stayed the night (on mattresses provided
by the Rajiv Gandhi Trust) in the house of Shivkumari Kori. She works
as a manual labourer earning Rs 30-40 a day and belongs to the Kori
dalit caste traditionally engaged in cloth-weaving.

Later that month, Sonia Gandhi visited her constituency, Rae Bareily,
where she went to the Mahe Fort and assured the locals that she will
talk to the tourism minister to help develop it as a tourist spot. The
fort was built by a Pasi ruler.

At some point Rahul Gandhi's "core team" decided to get a dalit
member. He was an Indian Institute of Management graduate who left his
job abroad to return to UP politics. His job was to "analyse" Rae
Bareily and Amethi. His name was Ranjan Chaudhary, a Pasi from
Mohanlalganj near Lucknow, and from where his sister Reena Chaudhary
had been Lok Sabha member of Parliament in 1999 as a SP legislator but
had lost the election on a Congress ticket in 2004. Denied a ticket in
2009, Ranjan left and joined the BJP. The Congress decided to support
an independent candidate for the Mohanlalganj – R K Chaudhary,
arguably the best known Pasi leader. The SP won the seat thanks to a
division of Pasi votes. R K Chaudhary refuses to join the Congress
because of his Ambedkarite outlook.

The Congress' dalit face in UP is Mayawati's former principal
secretary and co-accused in the Taj corridor scam, P L Punia. When he
won the Lok Sabha seat from Barabanki (a Pasi stronghold), Mayawati
spent 30 minutes speaking against him in a post-election meeting
addressing her party workers, and asked them if they knew that he was
not from her caste. He was a Dhanuk from Haryana.

In September 2009, Rahul Gandhi kept his own party workers in the dark
and reached a predominantly dalit village in Shravasti district and
stayed overnight. His host? Chedi Pasi.

On 2 October 2009, the top leadership of the UP Congress decided to
mark Gandhi Jayanti by emulating Rahul Gandhi and went on to spend a
night in a dalit house in various parts of the state. Party workers
arranged for cooks and plates, mosquito nets and mattresses. Congress
legislative party leader Pramod Tiwari slept at a dalit gram pradhan's
house in Pratapgarh. His name? Devaki Pasi. These night visits by the
state leaders were meant to take place every month but nothing was
heard again.

On 6 March 2010, Rahul Gandhi visited the victims of a temple stampede
in Pratapgarh. He skipped the hospital and went to the villages whose
residents had died. He even gave his mobile number to a survivor. His
name? Radhey Shyam Pasi.

On 14 April 2010, Rahul Gandhi started a massive "rath yatra"
programme as part of a push to rebuild the party cadre at all levels.
Very few dalits thronged the Congress functions as they were busy with
their own Ambedkar Jayanti celebrations. Rahul Gandhi said in his
speech, "This glorious state has suffered over the past two decades
essentially on account of the politics of caste and religion".

Not an Easy Task

Winning over Pasis and other non-Jatav dalits may not be easy unless
the Congress manages to get a major leader from those communities, but
the task has been made somewhat easier by Mayawati's repeated
announcement that her successor would be from her own Jatav caste.
Taking away even a few of Mayawati's voters can make a huge difference
in a multiparty electoral contest where, unlike 1989 or before, just
50,000 votes or so can win you an assembly seat.

In a sense, Rahul Gandhi is trying to do in 2012 exactly what Mayawati
did in 2007. Just as winning over brahmins seemed impossible for her,
winning over dalits seems impossible for him. Just as only a small
section of brahmins came forward with the BSP (Kanyakubja brahmins,
Satish Chandra Mishra's caste) only a small section of dalits may lean
towards the Congress. Rahul Gandhi's dalit visits are just as highly
publicised (the media is often informed in advance) as Mayawati's
"brahmin sammelans".

Perceptions are not only as important as reality but can shape
reality. Voters, particularly fence-sitters, often make their choices
depending on the perception of who is winning. It is the hawa – the
direction of the wind, they are keen on gauging. Mayawati worked for
two years, from 2005 to 2007, to create the perception that brahmins
were moving to BSP in large nuumbers, and that helped her win over
anti-incumbency votes from all sections. Similarly, Rahul Gandhi has
begun preparations for 2012 two years in advance by creating the
impression that dalits are turning towards the Congress.

However, the difference is that unlike Mayawati, Rahul Gandhi is not
openly holding caste gatherings. Unlike Nitish Kumar, he is not
promising a "mahadalit" strategy. Doing so would mean alienating the
urban youth gatherings in JNU and Thiruvananthapuram – audiences to
whom Mayawati would not appeal at all. In the end, Rahul Gandhi's
biggest advantage is the Congress Party's ability to be many things to
many people, never mind the paradoxes.

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