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The book needs a sequel

Aditi Phadnis / New Delhi July 26, 2007



What would Indian political history have looked like if there had been
no Uttar Pradesh? One is forced to ask oneself this question while
reading a collection of articles put together in a book edited by
Sudha Pai. Like any good book, it raises more questions than it
answers, and leaves you hungering for more about India's politically
most influential state.

Not that the book isn't comprehensive. It begins with an enquiry into
the origins of identity in UP: ideas that kept the size and definition
of UP as "the heartland" intact, thereby ensuring its claim to power.
The movement that led to the formation of Uttaranchal in 2000 was not
the first that sought a division of UP. Gynendra Kudaisya describes
how Gobind Ballabh Pant managed to defuse and stave off the first such
demand for a division of UP and its re-delineation as part of Delhi in
1954. Kudaisya's account brings to the politics of smoke-filled rooms
academic rigour, and explains the high price UP has paid for its
self-proclaimed role as "heartland" of Indian politics. In another
article, Salil Misra analyses the first general election of 1937
against the background of the tensions between the Congress and the
Muslim League and suggests that had Nehru been a little more tactful
in his handling of Jinnah, and the Congress a little more
accommodating in recognising the Muslim league's ambitions and indeed,
its electoral strength (66 in a House of 228), Jinnah might not have
been spurred into seeking an all-India organisation of the League and
who knows, the growth of communalism would have been prevented.

This flows into the issue of how the Congress's decline began and what
the nature of the parties was that filled the breach. The BJP's
Hindutva is dissected incisively by Smita Gupta on the basis of
conversations with real people, lending the account additional
credibility and she reaches the conclusion that the Hindutva project
as visualised by the BJP faced electoral defeat because swathes of
upper castes were not convinced about the BJP's intentions and
capacity to carry it forward to its logical conclusion. The BJP peaked
too early without having consolidated the gains of an electoral shift
of castes. Badri Narayan Tiwari says it was not for want of trying—he
analyses former BJP President Murali Manohar Joshi's attempts to
broadbase the caste coalition in and around his constituency
Allahabad.

But as Smita Gupta points out, it was a losing battle—Joshi was beaten
to it by the Samajwadi Party's Reoti Raman Singh. The book also
evaluates the growth and development of the Samajwadi Party and the
Bahujan Samaj Party. The Samajwadi Party's growth was assisted by the
Other Backward Classes (OBCs), says Anil K Verma and the absence of
ideological moorings, its vote share has not been eroded, as we saw in
the latest assembly elections. Why is it so? That is a question that
the second volume must answer. Verma predicts that despite the
successful mobilisation of Muslims, the SP's decline in national
politics might prompt Muslims of UP to turn to the Congress. So far,
there is no evidence that this might be happening.

The BSP's rise in UP, culminating in an absolute majority for the
party in the assembly election, has naturally led to speculation about
how it came to become the sole representatives of the Dalits. Nicolas
Jaoul analyses other non-political Dalit figures in UP politics to
conclude that the BSP could soon be faced with the twin challenges
that its new slogan of a sarvajan samaj—or a poly-caste identity—and
democracy represent. Vivek Kumar buttresses this argument when he says
that while Brahmins, resentful at the rise of Thakurs under the
Samajwadi Party, have now turned to the BSP, this might not endure.

There is an illuminating section in the book on economic reform and
governance in UP. Ajit Kumar Singh finds that unstable coalition
governments and pressures from interest groups prevented successive
government in the interests of survival, from mobilising resources
through additional tax and non-tax measures. So good politics has
bowed before bad economics.

This edited volume is essential reading for anyone who wants to
understand the problems and political challenges represented by Uttar
Pradesh. But it doesn't answer some crucial questions. What is
happening to the politics of the Sants, who were such an important
element in the Vishva Hindu Parishad's Ayodhya campaign? What are the
Congress's strategies—political or otherwise—for reinventing itself?
If we conclude that there are none, what does the future hold for the
politics of a state that dominates national politics? What about
regional politics, especially in Western Uttar Pradesh? And will the
third front in-the-making get some traction in UP? Another book is
needed to answer these questions. And hopefully it won't have
irritating mistakes: Mayawati's Brahmin lieutenant is not Sudhir
Chandra Mishra but Satish Chandra Mishra (Page 232). Mahant Awaidhnath
spelt his name in the Lok Sabha as Mahant Avaidyanath (page 123).


Political Process in Uttar Pradesh

Edited by Sudha Pai
Dorling Kindersley
Price: Rs 750; Pages: xlviii+415


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