‘Fragile’ Modi set to lose India polls, says oppn lawmaker

Bloomberg

The opposition leader who delivered the biggest blow to Narendra Modi’s ruling party in five years has vowed to replicate recent state-level victories in India’s upcoming general poll.
India’s main opposition Congress party scored its biggest win yet against Modi when it turfed his Bharatiya Janata Party from three state governments in December elections.
Congress lawmaker and Wharton alumni Sachin Pilot, who’s now deputy chief minister of Rajasthan, said the
opposition had proved Modi’s position is “fragile” as he outlined the Congress party’s strategy ahead of the 2019 polls.
The ruling BJP has tried to separate the national contest from its defeat in recent state elections, Pilot said, but the opposition’s momentum is forcing the ruling party to resort to populist policies.
“The BJP leadership can’t distance itself and say, ‘Those are state polls, but now we have a different narrative,’” Pilot said. “People, I think, have made up their minds. And the united opposition is very well placed to replace Mr. Modi.”
Modi’s party is favoured to win re-election but has slipped in the polls over the course of its five-year term.

Election strategy
Pilot took charge of his party’s Rajasthan presence roughly five years ago, when the party had just 21 seats in the state’s 200-member assembly. He said he concentrated on grassroots village-level politics and by-elections that helped build momentum for the state election victory.
He said his party’s national election strategy will highlight Modi’s failure to fulfill campaign pledges. It will also focus on farmers, youth unemployment and highlight the “over-centralisation of power” in Modi’s office, he said.
“You have to make them accountable,” he said.
The BJP’s defeats will have “no bearing” on the federal election, said lawmaker and party spokesman G.V.L. Narasimha Rao. The Congress party’s failure to secure big, decisive
majorities in the Rajasthan
and Madhya Pradesh elections shows “Pilot’s failure and Congress’s failure,” he added.
Political Coalitions
Pilot said Congress was winning allies while the BJP was losing them. And although a
recent alliance between two powerful regional parties left Congress on the sidelines, Pilot said the development was still positive for those opposing Modi. “One thing we do know is that neither of them is willing to touch the BJP with a barge pole, so the anti-BJP strength is gaining anyway,” Pilot said.
Pilot said the Congress party’s decision to write-off farm loans there and in Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh — where the party also formed governments in December — would be repeated if they
win the national elections due by May. The country’s economic growth under Modi has not generated employment for the one million youth who join the labour pool each month, he said.

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