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You are here: Home / Archives for News & Politics

NEW KARNATAKA EQUATION MAY SPOIL SP-BSP CHEMISTRY

May 14, 2018 by Nasheman

Karnataka assembly poll results may be an acid test of a possible SP-BSP pact in Uttar Pradesh ahead of 2019 Lok Sabha election.
With exit polls projecting HD Deve Gowda’s Janata Dal (Secular), which contested Karnataka polls in alliance with BSP, as the kingmaker, SP is keeping a close watch on the developments. If JD(S) and BSP join hands with BJP to form a coalition government in Karnataka, the prospects of the SP-BSP alliance in UP  can run into trouble. Both SP and BSP see BJP as their arch rival.

Senior SP leaders believe that Mayawati will not join the BJP-JD(S) alliance at the cost of unsettling her party in UP. “UP is the home turf of BSP and the party’s presence in the state is no match to what it can hope to gain politically as an alliance partner with JD(S) in Karnataka,” a senior SP leader told TOI on Sunday. JD(S) has so far maintained that it will not go with any of the two national parties – BJP and Congress – to form the government in Karnataka. Reports say Congress may try to win over JD (S) by pushing for a Dalit CM if the two parties have to come together to form a coalition government.

The Maha-Thag-Bandhan of parties like Congress, JD(S), BSP, SP etc. basically has NO colour, NO ism or philosophy BUT possess the only agenda to befool common people, win elections by hook-or-crook a…

Analysts, however, don’t rule out the possibility of Mayawati, under CBI lens for alleged irregularities in sale of sugar mills when she was UP CM, joining the BJP-JD (S) coalition government in Karnataka. In 2002, Mayawati became CM along with seven BJP MLAs as members of her cabinet. But things have changed since then.
SP MLC Udaiveer Singh, one of the architects of the SP-BSP pact for Gorakhpur and Phulpur bypolls, said: “BSP has to take a call in Karnataka. At present, there is no reason why the SP-BSP alliance will not continue till 2019 Lok Sabha polls and beyond.”

Filed Under: News & Politics

Siddaramaiah says will make way for Dalit CM

May 14, 2018 by Nasheman


Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah on Sunday said he will step aside for a Dalit Chief Minister if the Congress leadership wishes.

“It is fine if the party decides to have a Dalit Chief Minister,” he said, according to News18.

The statement comes after exit polls following Assembly elections on Saturday predicted a hung Assembly with the possibility of the Janata Dal-Secular emerging as the kingmaker.

Siddaramaiah also took to Twitter to dismiss exit polls as “entertainment” and told his party workers and supporters to relax and enjoy the weekend. “We are coming back,” he tweeted.

Earlier, he told the media: “This will be my last election.”

The Karnataka election results will be announced on Tuesday.

Filed Under: News & Politics

Taj Heritage Corridor being resurrected in new avatar, but questions remain

May 14, 2018 by Nasheman


The controversial Taj Heritage Corridor which brought down the Mayawati government in 2003 is being resurrected in a new avatar — but disturbing questions remain, environmentalists say.

The Uttar Pradesh horticulture department, in collaboration with the Archaeological Survey of India, has started greening the vast wasteland sandwiched between two world heritage monuments, the Taj Mahal and the Agra Fort, after the local MP and the chairman of the SC/ST Commission Ram Shankar Katheria laid the foundation stone of the new Taj View Garden a few days ago.

The Supreme Court, some 10 years ago, had asked the Archaeological Survey of India to clean up the debris from the corridor site and develop the 80 acres of reclaimed land as a green buffer to insulate the Taj Mahal from air pollution. But for want of resources, it took more than a decade for the work to start.

“We have laid a new lush green lawn and lined up ornamental plants. Come rainy season and the whole area would be a green delight and attract tourists,” UP horticulture department’s garden superintendent Mukesh Kumar said.

Agra Mayor Navin Jain has promised that the municipal corporation would extend the green frontiers and maintain the newly-developed park.

Once completed, the green stretch will be a new attraction for tourists.

Till recently the land was being used not only as a dumping ground for garbage but also as a place to bury bodies of children and aborted foetuses. The sprawling 80-acre platform, recovered through dredging of the river bed and refilling of the open space, was left unfinished after corruption charges were levelled against Mayawati. The charges eventually brought down her government.

The corridor was to begin from Khan-e-Alam, close to the Taj Mahal, and extend two kilometres towards the city behind the Agra Fort. It was to be extended later to allow tourists to reach Etmaddaula and Ram Bagh on the other side of the river.

For months, hundreds of tractors, earthmovers and machines worked round the clock to dig out silt and deposit it on the river bank to create a new platform, which was laid with Rajasthani stones.

The space was to be used to erect tall buildings, amusement parks, shopping malls and the like.

But, after a hue and cry from conservationists that the corridor would endanger the monument and allegations of large-scale corruption in the project, the Central government suspended the work in 2003. The alleged scandal reportedly involved government allotment of large tracts of land along the proposed corridor to a private builder for a song.

As the case against Mayawati dragged for years, the corridor remained an eyesore between two world heritage monuments. Scores of foreign tourists visit the site daily and take pictures that were not too flattering.

Environmentalists have on several occasions expressed concern at the alarming pollution level in the Yamuna after hundreds of truck-loads of waste, including carcasses of animals and bodies of children, was dumped into the river.

When tourists looked at the Taj Mahal from Agra Fort, what they saw was a disturbing sight — heaps of stinking garbage, carcasses and graves of children dotting the structure and mounds of rubble that invite mosquitoes, dogs, snakes, crows and vultures.

“Such an ugly sight near the world’s most beautiful monument can be repulsive and nauseating,” environmentalist Harendra Gupta said.

Rajiv Gupta, former president of the National Chamber of Industries and Commerce, thought that “a positive beginning has now been made and soon Agra will have a new tourist attraction”.

But local environmentalists point out that the so-called heritage corridor was, legally speaking, an encroachment on the Yamuna river bed. “That was the reason why work was stopped. Now instead of dismantling and removing the debris, they are seeking to legitimise an encroachment of public land,” said Shravan Kumar Singh of the Braj Mandal Heritage Conservation Society.

Eminent historian Prof R. Nath, who had first drawn attention to this controversial corridor back in 2002, told IANS on phone from Ajmer: “This corridor should be cleared and the Yamuna allowed to breathe free. Also, the artificial park created just behind the Taj Mahal on a mound of debris should be immediately cleared as it has distanced the river Yamuna which should flow touching the base of the monument. The powers that be should stop playing with monuments.”

Filed Under: News & Politics

Former BJP BBMP corporator attacked

May 14, 2018 by Nasheman


Vedavyas Bhat,former Bharatiya Janata Party member of Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagar Palike(BBMP) was today attacked by unknown persons early in the morning near Sajjanrao circle here.

According to a complaint filed by the victim’s sister to the Vishweswarapuram police station, Congress workers have committed the crime.

The former BBMP member is also a newspaper agent and had visited the spot to guide the hawkers working under him.It was at this juncture four people came on a motorbike and thrashed him.

The previous enmity is said to be the main reason for the crime while police are trying to identify the culprits with the help of CCTV footage recorded in the traffic signals.The severely injured Vedavyas Bhat has been admitted to a nearby hospital and is said to be recovering.

Hindusthan Samachar/Manohar Yadavatti

Filed Under: News & Politics

H D Kumarswamy says I am confident of becoming next CM’- JD (S)

May 13, 2018 by Nasheman


“I am confidence of becoming the next chief minister of Karnataka and we will surprise everyone on May 15,” said JD(S) Karnataka state president H D Kumaraswamy.

Speaking to news reporters here on Saturday May 12 , he expressed his confidence that JD(S) will come to power with majority.

“The people of Karnataka have already taken a decision and will bless JD(S) party. We will make everybody astonished on May 15,”

Reacting to the reference to several surveys by the reporters, he said that the reports of surveys will take a U turn. “I have faith in becoming the next chief minister in the state,” he said.

“The present elections in the state are very important for the people also. The people had given an opportunity to chief minister Siddaramaiah and Yeddyurappa. Now it is my turn. I am also an excellent candidate,” he said.

Asked what will happen if JD(S) fails to secure majority votes, he said that such a question does not arise and added, “The party will secure 122 seats.”

Filed Under: News & Politics

Yeddyurappa Figures out for Congress 70 Seats

May 13, 2018 by Nasheman

Even as most of the exit polls predict a hung Assembly in Karnataka, BJP’s chief ministerial candidate B S Yeddyurappa on Sunday put out his own figures, giving his party a majority and predicting only 70 seats for Congress.

Sounding confident of BJP’s victory, Yeddyurappa said, “I have seen the exit polls on various channels. BJP will form the majority government on Tuesday and Congress will exit from Karnataka. There is no question of joining hands with anyone.”

Giving the break-up of Assembly seats, he further said, “While we will get 130 seats, Congress won’t cross 70. JD(S) will manage 25 seats and Independents will win 3-4 seats.”

 

The saffron party leader said that as soon as he comes the chief minister, he will waive off loans as promised in the manifesto, and slammed Siddaramaiah for being an “anti-farmer” and “anti-people”.

When asked about Siddaramaiah’s tweet asking Congress workers not to worry about exit polls, Yeddyurappa said, “I am not saying Siddaramaiah should believe exit polls. He, anyway, won’t cross 70 seats. I want to make it clear that Siddaramaiah’s term is over. He will lose both in Chamundeshwari and Badami.”

“Look at the way he has been behaving for the past 15 days. It is Siddaramaiah who is mentally confused,” the BJP leader said, while hitting out at the CM was calling him “mentally disturbed”.

Most exit polls have predicted a tight race between the Congress and the BJP with the possibility of the Janata Dal (Secular) emerging as the kingmaker. Republic TV-Jan Ki Baat and ABP-C Voter predicted that the BJP will emerge as the single largest party by bagging 104 and 104-116 seats, respectively, in the 224-member House.

The two news channels gave the incumbent Congress 78 and 83-94 seats and former prime minister HD Deve Gowda-led JD(S) 37 and 20-29 seats, respectively.

Polling was held on Saturday in 222 constituencies following the countermanding of election for the Jayanagara seat due to the death of BJP candidate BN Vijaykumar, and deferment of voting for RR Nagar seat after a massive row erupted over a large number of voter ID cards being found in a Bengaluru apartment.
Any party or alliance will need the support of 112 MLAs to form the new government.

India Today-Axis exit poll, however, put the Congress in a pole position and predicted its tally in the range of 106-118 seats while of the BJP between 79-92. It saw the JD(S) tally between 22-30 seats. The Poll of Exit Polls on NDTV forecast 97, 90 and 31 seats for the BJP, the Congress and the JD(S) respectively.

Times Now-VMR predicted that the BJP will win 94 seats while the Congress will bag 97 and the JD(S) 28. However, Times Now-Chanakya forecast a majority for the BJP with 120 seats and gave the Congress and the JD(S) 73 and 26 seats, respectively.

The Congress had won 122 seats in the 2013 state Assembly polls following a split in the BJP, which was reduced to 40 seats while the JD(S) also got 40 seats.

Both the BJP and the Congress ran a high-decibel campaign in the state with Prime Minister Narendra Modi leading the saffron charge with 21 rallies while Rahul Gandhi and Chief Minister Siddaramaiah led their bid to ensure that it defies anti-incumbency to retain power.

Filed Under: News & Politics

Exit polls predict hung Assembly but number crunchers are likely making another mistake

May 13, 2018 by Nasheman

Hubli: People in queue to caste their vote for Karnataka assembly elections at Rotary Deaf School booth in Hubli on Sunday. PTI Photo(PTI5_5_2013_000037B)


Given the wild misses that characterise exit polls, only a desperate punter would put money on them. No algorithm seems good enough to crack the behavioural pattern of Indian voters. However, while the numbers of a specific pollster may be inaccurate, taken together these polls generally reflect a broad trend. Such a reading would imply that Karnataka is staring at a hung Assembly in the state. It could be a wrong conclusion.

Six out of nine pollsters give BJP the edge while three put Congress ahead. Only three agencies predict a clear majority. India Today-Axis My India’s upper limit (106-118) gives Congress the simple majority in 224-seat House while Republic TV-Jan ki Baat (95-114) and Today’s Chanakya (120) see BJP coming to power on its own. The rest predict a hung Assembly with the poll of polls throwing up 99 seats for BJP, 88 for Congress and 33 for (JD-S). In all these scenarios, Janata Dal-Secular (JD-S) is the power broker in a divided House with around 30 seats.

People queue up to cast their ballot during the polling day for the Karnataka Assembly election 2018 in Bengaluru. PTIRepresentational image. PTI
Exit polls are done by professionals based on data mining, algorithms, calculations and some amount of interpretations. These aren’t punts. Even so, it is likely that the bigger picture remains elusive to psephologists and newsrooms just as it did during the Uttar Pradesh Assembly election in 2017. In Uttar Pradesh, no ‘wave’ was detected. Pollsters, journalists, and opinion-makers foresaw a dogfight between BJP, SP+Congress, and BSP amid complex caste equations, and predicted a hung Assembly. BJP bagged 324 seats.

It wasn’t because pollsters and journalists were lax in their job but because their tools were not good enough to pick up the signals. We might witness an encore in Karnataka. That is because Narendra Modi and Amit Shah have transformed the art of winning elections in such a way that political rivals and analysts have been blindsided alike. Congress has not yet been able to crack the code, though in Siddaramaiah they possibly have the strongest candidate to upend BJP’s plans of expanding footprint in the south.

The Karnataka chief minister remains supremely confident, even brash, and he operates as a powerful regional satrap independent of, and uninfluenced by the Congress high command. He decides own strategy, banks on personal charisma and has little use of Rahul Gandhi’s ‘leadership’. If Siddaramaiah returns to power, it will be despite Congress, not because of it.

On Saturday, the day of polling, he called BJP’s state president and former chief minister BS Yeddyurappa “mentally disturbed” and claimed that Congress will get 120 seats.

“I was expecting this. The exit poll by India Today is closer to the truth. For 6 months now, I have been saying the same thing. I understand the pulse of the people, so I was confident that Congress will win a majority and come to power,” Siddaramaiah said.

The Congress might be tempted to take comfort from the fact that voter turnout, at 70 percent, remained lower than in 2013 which may indicate an absence of anti-incumbency sentiment. This correlation, though, has been contested in recent studies which prove that “increase in voter turnout in India does not signal rise in anti-incumbent sentiment”.

Where pollsters and political rivals might be getting it repeatedly wrong is to misunderstand BJP’s campaign strategy. It doesn’t depend on election cycles. The campaign stage obviously is high on rhetoric and optics where BJP, like any other party, selects candidates, does data mining of the electorate, and accordingly holds election rallies, yatras, and outreach programmes. But the groundwork for each election is laid years in advance and the core campaigning remains patient and understated, but relentless.

Also, the prime minister and his trusted general are in constant search of new ways to identify and categorise the electorate. Weight is obviously placed on traditional metrics such as castes and communities but new metrics such as age and gender get equal attention.

Modi, for instance, has been nurturing two core constituencies throughout the entire tenure of his premiership — women and the youth. This approach is backed by impeccable electoral logic. The number of youth voters (18-25 years of age) has doubled since 2013.
According to Karnataka chief electoral officer Sanjeev Kumar, the draft electoral rolls of 2018 elections (in February) showed the number of young voters at 15.4 lakh, compared to 7.2 lakh voters in 2013, a rise of 113 percent. The number, he had then said, could go up a bit as still there was time for inclusion of names on electoral rolls, according to a report in The Times of India.

Modi has been assiduously courting youth and first-time voters through various outreach schemes. He has tried to make the Swachh Bharat initiative a mass movement and youth participation remains a big part of that plan. He has sought to incentivise participation through a reward mechanism. The entire exercise taps into the enthusiasm of the youth instills a sense of nation-building in them and unfailingly stitches in their minds the leadership abilities of the prime minister.

Similarly, through student-interaction programs such as Pariksha Pe Charcha, youth-centric initiatives, and his fortnightly radio programme Mann Ki Baat (where he takes up various youth-related issues, among others), Modi’s constant endeavour has been to stay connected with the youth and open a channel of communication through his digital presence.

The effect is evident. Surveys capture youth’s affinity for Modi who is looked upon as a youth icon even though Rahul Gandhi is much younger in age.

Similarly, Modi has also courted women voters through a number of targeted initiatives of which Ujjawala has been most successful. Modi has also highlighted the need for and acted upon building toilets to improve sanitation, health and address the dignity of women. He has also worked to increase maternity leave, battled for the end of triple talaq, and started a scheme to save and educate girl children. These are obviously not mere electoral initiatives but nevertheless serve to build a connect with female voters who may look upon the prime minister as a ‘doer’.
It would interest many to know that according to the chief electoral officer of Karnataka, women and youth have voted in large numbers this election. “It is heartening to tell you that women and young voters have come out in large numbers in this election,” Kumar told reporters on Saturday. This should indicate something.

While this has been happening, Shah has gone about quietly in his task, strengthening BJP’s organisational structure, creating a two-way mechanism through which feedback is encouraged, and passed on to party leadership all through the year based on which policies are made. Shah’s communication strategy, once again, is not timed with the election cycle. He focuses on building relationships between voters and party functionaries at the micro level and sustaining those relationships all through the year. This enables the party to listen to the people and address their frustrations and complaints that creates an atmosphere of trust. This is invaluable for a political party.

As the election nears, Shah intensifies the tempo and gives his workers some targets that are to be achieved.

“I appeal to workers, don’t look at the candidate. Just look at the lotus symbol (the party’s symbol) and Modi’s photo,” Shah had said while addressing booth workers in Bantwal in Dakshina Kannada district last February, according to a report in Hindustan Times. “Your duty is not to win the Assembly constituency, it is to win your booth. When many such booths are won, we will win the election,” he was quoted, as saying.

On the polling day, he has another set of instructions, as another Hindustan Times report elaborates. “I want all of you — Shakti Kendra in-charge, booth committee members, page presidents, active members — and your families to vote before 10.30 am on polling day. Finish your own duty by then. And then you spend the rest of the day in mobilising others,” Shah had said during the Gujarat elections.

This isn’t to say that plans do not run into hitches or failures. But these communication channels make it more likely for BJP to tide over crises and ignore media-driven outrages. These core strategies are also far removed from electoral bombast and unrelated to the election cycle, which is why media radar fails to pick them up. On 15 May, it’ll be known to what extent have these been effective.

Filed Under: News & Politics

Do Whatever You Want, Don’t Worry Enjoy : Siddaramaiah

May 13, 2018 by Nasheman

A day after exit polls hinted towards a hung assembly in Karnataka with BJP emerging as the largest single party followed by the Congress, Chief Minister Siddaramaiah asked Congress workers and supporters not to worry about the forecasts.

Terming the exit polls as “entertainment for the next 2 days”, Siddaramaiah on Sunday morning, in his tweets, asked the party workers to “enjoy your weekend” and said “we are coming back”.

Most exit polls have predicted a tight race between the two main rivals — BJP and Congress — in the Karnataka Assembly elections with JD(S) emerging as a likely kingmaker.

“Exit opinion polls are entertainment for the next 2 days. Relying on poll of polls is like a person who can’t swim crossing a river on foot relying on a statistician who told him the average depth of the river is 4 feet. Please note average of 6+4+2 is 4. At 6 feet you drown!

Filed Under: News & Politics

‘EVM only registering BJP votes’, alleges Congress’ Brijesh Kalappa

May 12, 2018 by Nasheman

Congress spokesperson Brijesh Kalappa has alleged that polling booths in Bengaluru’s RMV 2nd Stage had EVM machines only registering votes for the BJP.

Kalappa posted a series of tweets on complaints of faulty EVMs and said the party would take it up with the Election Commission.

There are 5 booths opposite my Parent's apartment at RMV II Stage, Bengaluru. In the 2nd booth, any button pressed registers a vote ONLY to kiwi mele Kamala i.e Kamal ke phool. Angry voters are returning without casting their vote.

— Brijesh Kalappa (@brijeshkalappa) May 12, 2018

So far we have received 3 complaints of malfunctioning EVM/VVPAT across the State including from Ramanagara, Chamarajpet and Hebbal. The INC is taking up these issues with the EC.

— Brijesh Kalappa (@brijeshkalappa) May 12, 2018

However, social media users claimed they did not face any issues at the same booths in Karnataka.

Filed Under: India

Rajasthan: Class 8 reference book calls Bal Gangadhar Tilak ‘father of terrorism’

May 12, 2018 by Nasheman

Jaipur: In what appears to be a case of poor choice of words, a Class 8 reference book described freedom fighter Bal Gangadhar Tilak as the “Father of Terrorism”.

Printed by a Matura-based publisher, the book is used by private English-medium schools affiliated to the Rajasthan Board of Secondary Education (RBSE).

The Rajasthan State Textbook Board publishes books in Hindi, leaving students no other option but to use reference books.

“Tilak demonstrated a path towards national movement, therefore, he is called as the father of terrorism,” reads page 267 of chapter 22 of the book.

The description is part of sub-topic “Incidents of National Movement during 18th and 19th century”.

“Tilak clearly believed that we cannot achieve anything just by pleading the British officers. Through Shivaji and Ganpati festivals, Tilak aroused unique awareness in the country. He instilled the mantra of freedom among the masses, due to which he became a thorn in the eyes of the British,” the book reads.

Officials at the Student Advisor Publication Private Limited, which publishes the book, said the mistake had been rectified in the revised edition.

“The translators made the mistake. It had come to our notice and was corrected in the revised edition last month. The first edition was published last year,” Rajpal Singh, a production official at the publisher’s office, told PTI.

(PTI)

Filed Under: India

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