One of the accusations against former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi leveled by her detractors in the early 80s was that she had institutionalized corruption. Today we have a chief minister, who has gone a step further and managed to legitimize both corruption and nepotism. The breather the scam-stung BS Yeddyurappa has got from the BJP high command to continue in the office has exposed the double standards of the BJP on the issue of corruption.
It appears as if the compulsions of electoral politics have ensured that the beleaguered chief minister got a reprieve despite serious charges of corruption and nepotism leveled against him. The KIADB land denotification issue and the allotment of BDA sites to his family members had made the continuation of Yeddyurappa in the office highly untenable. The party was left red-faced for several days when he defied the high command’s diktats. In fact, the dragging of feet took the fizz out of the party’s fight against the ruling UPA over the 2G spectrum scam and the CWG scandals.
Whether or not Yeddyurappa will continue in the chair for the remainder of the five-year term, the fact remains that the regional leader has cut the high-command into size and exposed the differences within their ranks.
Yeddyurappa’s incredible capacity to cling on to power had been revealed on two earlier occasions, the first being the Bellary Reddy brothers’ coup last October and the second just a month ago when he had nearly lost his seat when 16 of his MLAs deserted him, forcing two back-to-back vote-of-confidence sessions on him. But, on both occasions, the 67-year-old emerged victorious much to the shock of his political rivals both within and outside the party.
“I am not the only chief minister to have allotted lands to family members. All my predecessors have done the same,” the unfazed chief minister had said immediately after the allegations started making the headlines. As the opposition and the media kept up the pressure, the CM returned the sites and ordered a probe. On any other occasion, this could have been construed as admission of guilt, but the unfazed chief minister and his supporters interpreted it as an act of supreme honesty. “Has any chief minister in the history of Karnataka politics ordered an inquiry against himself and subjected him to a commission of inquiry?” Dhananjay Kumar, the BJP leader, asked on TV channels in an unashamed tone.
When anchors and journalists started reminding the BJP top-brass of examples of Bangaru Laxman, LK Advani and Jaswant Singh it appeared as if the countdown has begun. But the Karnataka chief minister remained as defiant as ever and started giving rebellious postures and also secured the blessings of RSS, who were more worried about ‘secular’ JDS and Congress making use of the situation than a ‘corrupt’ chief minister holding on to power. The RSS representative in the cabinet, VS Acharya took up the cudgels for Yeddyurappa and impressed upon the Nagpur netas the risk involved in recalling the Hindutva leader, who has successfully passed the anti-cow slaughter bill in both the houses of the Assembly.
The caste equation also came into picture and with some Lingayat Swamijis throwing their weight behind the scam-tainted CM, the high command had no other option but to tread cautiously. The allegations were projected by these seers as a political conspiracy against Lingayat community. With Swamijis rallying behind him firmly, Yeddyurappa now trained his gun on his bête noire Ananth Kumar. A group of Dalit activists sprung in front of the Bangalore South MP’s home and provided empirical evidence to back his case against the Brahmin leader. The presence of an overwhelming majority of Lingayat MLAs in the BJP and his image as the unquestioned leader among the largest religious community in the state turned the tides in his favour.
With the BJP government in Karnataka staying afloat with a wafer thin majority, it was but natural that the high command had to weigh up all the options carefully. It was fully aware that the moral high ground on the issue of corruption would be lost once Yeddyurappa was allowed to continue in office. Consequently, the agitation both inside and outside parliament over 2G spectrum case would lose steam. But in the ultimate analysis, the political gains of safeguarding the first ever BJP government in the South India was thought to be greater than the risk of conceding ground to the opposition over issues of morality.
The imminent elections to the 997 zilla panchayat seats and 3,659 taluk panchayat seats in Karnataka turned out to be one big factor that worked in favour of Yeddyurappa. In an ideal world, the party should have dumped the scam-tainted chief minister in order to secure the confidence of the electorate. But the tragedy of our times is that honesty and integrity are not a virtue when you jump into an electoral battle, where the winner is decided mainly on factors like caste and religion. The CM and his team has been successful in convincing the high command that the BJP has won all elections during the last two and half years under the leadership of Yeddyurappa, an argument which effectively forced the high-command to sacrifice ethics for electoral gains.
The BJP high-command timed the announcement of Yeddyurappa’s continuation impeccably well. The pre-occupation of the media with the Bihar election results, which went overwhelmingly in favour of the NDA – read BJP – came as a blessing for the party high-command. The frenzy of the Bihar results helped the BJP central leadership to get away with their shameless act. Incidentally, it was the fear of HD Kumaraswamy, more than anything else, which might have forced BJP to shelve their red signal for the chief minister. Unseating Yeddyurappa would have meant BJP losing the momentum to JDS and it is the bhooth of HDK and Devegowda that might have eventually saved the CM, albeit for the time being.
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