Chouhan hardsells ‘bhai, beta, mama’ image in bid for hat-trick
BY M Post Bureau15 Nov 2013 4:49 AM IST
M Post Bureau15 Nov 2013 4:49 AM IST
It’s ‘brand Shivraj’ on which the BJP is banking to make a hattrick in Madhya Pradesh, where discontent against sitting MLAs of the party threatens to snowball into a crisis in a number of constituencies. Despite denying ticket to 45 of its 143 MLAs in the 230-member state assembly, the anti-incumbency against the legislators is still a daunting task for the party, which has ruled the state for past two consecutive terms.
Mindful of the resentment against his party’s MLAs, chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan, who hardsells his carefully cultivated image of ‘bhai, beta and mama’ (brother, son and maternal uncle) to people, repeatedly assures in constituency after constituency that if people elect a BJP candidate, they will have ‘two MLAs – one the local candidate and one Shivraj – and I will never disappoint you, will give my life for your development’.
Trailing the campaign of the chief minister in Chambal region for a day brings out the strategy in clear terms.
In Joura assembly segment of Morena, he asks voters, ‘Do you want to see Shivraj as the next chief minister? If you want me to become chief minister, vote for the BJP candidate Subedar Singh. After all it is MLAs, who will make the chief minister.’
The Vaishyas, traditional voters of BJP, have strong reservations against the local candidate, who as the marketing committee head some time ago took certain measures irking the business community.
Chouhan seeks to reassure, ‘I have come to you with a hope that when hands are raised to elect me as chief minister, they should include the hands of Joura MLA. If Subedar Singh becomes your MLA, you will not have only one MLA. Shivraj will your other MLA... If you want to make Shivraj chief minister, you will have to make Subedar your MLA.’
Bhan Singh Yadav from Keravali village in Joura says, ‘The venue will be filled, when Shivraj will speak. People come here to listen to the chief minister not anybody else. There may be some discontent against the MLA but Chouhan will have impact on voters.’
BSP’s sitting MLA from the seat, Maniram Dhakad, belongs to the community of Chouhan and poses a tough challenge.
As the challenges surmount, the chief minister, a strict vegetarian not even eating garlic and onion, as his staff gushes, is following a morning to midnight regime to cover as many constituencies as possible.
‘Chai and paratha does the fill for Chouhan as the campaign trail continues.
A day with the chief minister brings out to fore the urgency in the tone of the BJP’s development mascot in Madhya Pradesh to reach out to as many voters as possible in an election, in which Congress is trying hard to turn the tide against BJP.
Congress has come out with a charge sheet carrying litany of charges against the BJP government and announcing freebies in its poll manifesto.
Chouhan dismisses both first as a ‘bunch of lies’ and second as ‘dreamselling’.
‘They are now promising everything free. What was the position of electricity when they were in power here. Since they know, they cannot come to power, Congress would promise everything free,’ Chouhan tells voters during his campaign.
He also promises rapid industrialisation of Chambal claiming credit for making the region dacoit free.
After covering nine constituencies in Gwalior-Chambal region considered to be strong hold of Scindias, Chouhan tells his party’s candidate from Morena Rustam Singh, a former IG of police in this land once known for bandits, that he should try to take all sections along.
Congress campaign committee chief Jyotriaditya Scindia has also been touring the constituencies in Gwalior and Morena, that are considered the strong hold of the royal family of Scindias.
But Chouhan points out ‘you saw the crowd in my meetings and compare it with what was the gathering in his meetings. People do not want Congress to come back to power here.’
Narendra Modi is also set to go on a campaign blitzkrieg but Chouhan denies this has anything to do with any sense of apprehension that the BJP can otherwise not perform well in Madhya Pradesh.
‘Modiji had come here even in the last assembly election,’ he says but adds that the Gujarat chief minister is ‘very popular’ among masses.
Mindful of the resentment against his party’s MLAs, chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan, who hardsells his carefully cultivated image of ‘bhai, beta and mama’ (brother, son and maternal uncle) to people, repeatedly assures in constituency after constituency that if people elect a BJP candidate, they will have ‘two MLAs – one the local candidate and one Shivraj – and I will never disappoint you, will give my life for your development’.
Trailing the campaign of the chief minister in Chambal region for a day brings out the strategy in clear terms.
In Joura assembly segment of Morena, he asks voters, ‘Do you want to see Shivraj as the next chief minister? If you want me to become chief minister, vote for the BJP candidate Subedar Singh. After all it is MLAs, who will make the chief minister.’
The Vaishyas, traditional voters of BJP, have strong reservations against the local candidate, who as the marketing committee head some time ago took certain measures irking the business community.
Chouhan seeks to reassure, ‘I have come to you with a hope that when hands are raised to elect me as chief minister, they should include the hands of Joura MLA. If Subedar Singh becomes your MLA, you will not have only one MLA. Shivraj will your other MLA... If you want to make Shivraj chief minister, you will have to make Subedar your MLA.’
Bhan Singh Yadav from Keravali village in Joura says, ‘The venue will be filled, when Shivraj will speak. People come here to listen to the chief minister not anybody else. There may be some discontent against the MLA but Chouhan will have impact on voters.’
BSP’s sitting MLA from the seat, Maniram Dhakad, belongs to the community of Chouhan and poses a tough challenge.
As the challenges surmount, the chief minister, a strict vegetarian not even eating garlic and onion, as his staff gushes, is following a morning to midnight regime to cover as many constituencies as possible.
‘Chai and paratha does the fill for Chouhan as the campaign trail continues.
A day with the chief minister brings out to fore the urgency in the tone of the BJP’s development mascot in Madhya Pradesh to reach out to as many voters as possible in an election, in which Congress is trying hard to turn the tide against BJP.
Congress has come out with a charge sheet carrying litany of charges against the BJP government and announcing freebies in its poll manifesto.
Chouhan dismisses both first as a ‘bunch of lies’ and second as ‘dreamselling’.
‘They are now promising everything free. What was the position of electricity when they were in power here. Since they know, they cannot come to power, Congress would promise everything free,’ Chouhan tells voters during his campaign.
He also promises rapid industrialisation of Chambal claiming credit for making the region dacoit free.
After covering nine constituencies in Gwalior-Chambal region considered to be strong hold of Scindias, Chouhan tells his party’s candidate from Morena Rustam Singh, a former IG of police in this land once known for bandits, that he should try to take all sections along.
Congress campaign committee chief Jyotriaditya Scindia has also been touring the constituencies in Gwalior and Morena, that are considered the strong hold of the royal family of Scindias.
But Chouhan points out ‘you saw the crowd in my meetings and compare it with what was the gathering in his meetings. People do not want Congress to come back to power here.’
Narendra Modi is also set to go on a campaign blitzkrieg but Chouhan denies this has anything to do with any sense of apprehension that the BJP can otherwise not perform well in Madhya Pradesh.
‘Modiji had come here even in the last assembly election,’ he says but adds that the Gujarat chief minister is ‘very popular’ among masses.
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