[The Prime Minister just made mincemeat of the Model Code of Conduct, and
the Election Commission, without batting an eyelid, all too readily issued
a "clean chit"!

《Given this machinery for self-communication at Modi’s command, just what
did that surgical strike on voters’ attention in announcing Mission Shakti
seek to achieve? It was clearly an attempt to retrieve the post-Balakot
narrative of Modi as a strong, capable and decisive leader, one that tended
to get lost in the welter of oppositional signaling. The whole thing was
choreographed to perfection, even the delay of about an hour before the
telecast helped build up anticipation and thicken the crowds. Mission
Shakti was designed to reduce NYAY to a nay and tar all those who
criticised the PM as anti-national. If, after Balakot, raising questions
about the air strikes was anti-army, critiquing the timing of the
announcement was “anti-scientists”.

Post the announcement, TV channels built on the narrative — with fantastic
backdrops of missiles spinning through space. When the PM began his Meerut
election speech a day later, it was headlined: “The PM’s first rally after
Mission Shakti”. ***The campaign for Election 2019 has only just begun.
Indian voters must prepare themselves for the incredible, the implausible —
and perhaps even the impossible*** [emphasis added].》

***Most striking is the dire warning issued above:
"The campaign for Election 2019 has only just begun. Indian voters must
prepare themselves for the incredible, the implausible — and perhaps even
the impossible."***

In this context, one's attention may be drawn to an observation made by
this observer, post the announcement of poll results in five states:

<<***CC. Evidently, the Modi-Shah duo cannot but take note of its declining
fortune.

They're quite capable of and, in fact, pretty keen to play dirty, as and
when required.
One may, here, recall the way Modi had he cooked up a charge of *treason*,
nothing less, against his predecessor and the previous Vice President of
the nation just to garner some extra votes in a medium-sized state poll,
which'd be retracted by Jaitley later on the floor of the parliament, after
the Gujarat poll is well over and the intended purpose served.
(Ref.: <https://twitter.com/officeofrg/status/946038581306441728?lang=en>.)

Modi is far from a risk-averse person.
If pushed to the corner, he can act pretty recklessly, in order to secure
some immediate advantage, regardless of what happens beyond that.
The monstrous demonetisation is a graphic illustration.
(Ref.: <
http://www.documentcloud.org/documents/4311065-India-Demonetisation-One-Year-After-A-Synoptic.html
>.)

The recent developments in the RBI, leading to the installation of a
faithful former bureaucrat, an MA in History (ref.: <
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shaktikanta_Das>), at its top, leave no space
for any whatever doubt that the regime is hell bent on raiding the reserve
funds of the RBI, in order to shower pre-poll sops all around.

The other known unknown is the Ram Mandir agitation and the orchestrated
demand for an ordinance bypassing the Supreme Court.

There could be even other unknown unknowns.***>>

(Ref.: 'The Poll Results in Five States: The Semi-Final? Implications? A
Cursory Look', dtd. 12 12 2018, at <
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/greenyouth/2d-BZ25TvHg/LfcNkumKBAAJ
>.)]

https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/narendra-modi-mission-shakti-tv-announcement-media-elections-2019-5649352/?fbclid=IwAR2uJ6nyRmwTAEAiOuJNn8pkxeiCJ2AsK69OcEGWFcYTWbOYSAtLZW_bodg

>From The PM, To The People
Announcement of Mission Shakti highlighted PM’s capacity for mass messaging

Written by Pamela Philipose |

Updated: March 30, 2019 1:30:47 am

Prime Minister Narendra Modi (Express photo by Gajendra Yadav)

The manner in which an announcement from Prime Minister Narendra Modi on
March 27, urging the nation to stand by for an important announcement
between 11.45 and 12 noon, reached a wide swathe of the population was
remarkable. The almost instant awareness of it across the country,
regardless of class or location, gestures to three significant realities.

First, it demonstrated that the sharpness of the memory of that 10.15 pm
unscheduled TV broadcast of November 9, 2016, when the PM announced
demonetisation, has not been blunted. Second, it showed that ever since the
Balakot strikes, anxiety over the escalation of hostilities between India
and Pakistan in an election season, has permeated popular consciousness —
not perhaps in the triumphalist, muscular register of the BJP, but more in
terms of the real negative repercussions war would have on their lives. But
there is a third reality — the high level of mediatisation of Indian
society. Most important to note in this context is that the PM has been
able to consolidate for himself immense media capital and the power it
affords, so that he can now effortlessly put out messages in a one-to-many,
efficient, intimate and uni-directional way.

Such a capacity for mass messaging allows him to embody and express the
aspirations of those who support him, not just voters, but some of the
biggest corporates. Institutional oversight over such messaging is almost
impossible to achieve, given such a powerful presence and the dilemma
facing the Election Commission, on deciding whether Modi had breached the
model code, despite going public with the fact that permission was not
sought, would indicate this.

Let us then consider some of the media ammunition that lies in the Modi war
chest. For one, he has succeeded in suborning the independence of
mainstream media through a combination of corporate influence, direct
benefit transfers, and the mailed fist. For another, he is recognised today
as the world’s most social media savvy politician. Even Donald Trump has
been left behind, to gauge by his Instagram profile. Image-driven
Instagram, let us remember, is the latest, shiniest thing on the social
media block. A recent assessment indicates that while Trump has 10 million
followers on this platform, Modi has 14.8 million. The numbers of Modi’s
other social media workhorses are similarly mind-boggling with Facebook
followers, at over 43 million, being 20 million more than Trump’s.

This is the base on which Modi has built another tier of social media
interactivity: Through highly personalised apps. The NaMo app was
introduced during the last general election as a platform for “volunteers”
to receive messages directly from him. This was rejigged for wider
application a year after he came to power and is now even offered as a
pre-installed add-on with the Reliance Jio phone. The multiplier effect of
this is marked. Content from this app makes its way into all manner of
Facebook and WhatsApp accounts, gets tweeted and Instagrammed widely. Yet
no fact-checking goes into it. As an assessment noted, the absence of
content moderation makes it a fount of communal propaganda and fake news.
Another app, this time appearing to be independent, goes by the name of
MyGov. Its website claims it has “7,937.08 K” registered users, to date.

While it exists ostensibly to provide information on the Modi government’s
initiatives, its propagandist intent is written all over. There are
innumerable other interventions. NaMo TV focused only on Modi’s speeches,
first used in Gujarat, is now a national channel in itself, available on
YouTube. Plans are on to beam it directly into homes.

Given this machinery for self-communication at Modi’s command, just what
did that surgical strike on voters’ attention in announcing Mission Shakti
seek to achieve? It was clearly an attempt to retrieve the post-Balakot
narrative of Modi as a strong, capable and decisive leader, one that tended
to get lost in the welter of oppositional signaling. The whole thing was
choreographed to perfection, even the delay of about an hour before the
telecast helped build up anticipation and thicken the crowds. Mission
Shakti was designed to reduce NYAY to a nay and tar all those who
criticised the PM as anti-national. If, after Balakot, raising questions
about the air strikes was anti-army, critiquing the timing of the
announcement was “anti-scientists”.

Post the announcement, TV channels built on the narrative — with fantastic
backdrops of missiles spinning through space. When the PM began his Meerut
election speech a day later, it was headlined: “The PM’s first rally after
Mission Shakti”. The campaign for Election 2019 has only just begun. Indian
voters must prepare themselves for the incredible, the implausible — and
perhaps even the impossible.

The writer’s new book is Media’s Shifting Terrain
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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