Whether the Bharatiya Janata Party’s prime
ministerial candidate Narendra Modi will have an impact on the Delhi assembly
election results may be hard to tell for sure, but there’s little doubt that
Mr. Modi has energised the faction-ridden state party unit.
Even before
Delhiites were officially introduced to Mr. Modi on September 29 at his first
rally in the city, party workers had declared that there was a “Modi wave” in
the Capital, which would propel them past the finish line in the upcoming Delhi
polls.
The party that
until less than a month ago had chief ministerial candidate hopeful Vijay
Goel’s posters plastered across the city has since banked on the BJP’s ‘poster
boy’ – literally putting Mr. Modi on posters and billboards alongside CM
candidate Harsh Vardhan – in a bid to cash in on votes and topple the 15-year
rule of the Sheila Dikshit led Congress government. He is on billboards across
the city pointing at the rise in prices of vegetables and “skyrocketing” power
tariffs.
So energised
has the party got by success of the September 29 rally, that while Mr. Modi had
first agreed to address one public meeting in the city, the Delhi BJP was
prompted to request him to make at least three public appearances before the
December 4 polls, party sources said.
“From the BJP’s
viewpoint he is our mascot and he represents the development agenda of the
party,” said senior leader Vijay Jolly. “Since he is our mascot at the national
level his pictures are used to attract voters. For the Delhi elections, we have
pictures of Mr. Modi and the clean image of Dr. Harsh Vardhan, both are best
suited for external publicity campaigns,” said Mr. Jolly, and added that the
Modi rally was an indication of the “pulse of the youth” and their support for
the party’s PM candidate.
Officially, Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit
played down assertions that the Gujarat Chief Minister would have any impact on
Delhi Assembly polls. “Narendra Modi is BJP's prime ministerial candidate and
not a Prime Minister already. Therefore, I don’t think Modi would have any
impact on the Assembly polls which are local elections,” said Ms. Dikshit.
The joker in
the pack in the Delhi elections remains the newly formed Arvind Kejriwal-led
Aam Aadmi Party, with polls unable to agree on the party’s likely impact, and
whether it will eat into the Congress’ or the BJP’s vote. The voter base of the
AAP does appear to overlap with that of the Modi-led BJP; a recent CSDS-CNN-
IBN poll showed
that 51% of those who wanted to see Mr. Kejriwal as the CM of Delhi wanted to see
Mr. Modi as the PM of the country.
Priyanka Bajpai(3rd semester)
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