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A familiar face will be missing from the front row benches when the 17th Lok Sabha assembles after the April-May general election: Lal Krishna Advani. For the first time in five decades, the 91-year-old BJP veteran has been denied a ticket to Parliament by the very party he co-founded with late Atal Bihari Vajpayee.
The end to Advani’s eventful public life has been abrupt and rather unceremonious. Till the BJP released its first list of candidates for the upcoming elections, it was widely assumed that he would contest for the seventh time from Gujarat’s Gandhinagar. In fact, the party’s Parliamentary Board had decided at its first poll meeting that seniors like Advani and Murli Manohar Joshi would have the privilege of choice. It was left to them to determine whether they were game for another electoral battle.
Both senior leaders kept quiet and their silence was taken to be an answer in the affirmative. Consequently, it came as a rude shock to find that Amit Shah had replaced Advani as the BJP nominee from Gandhinagar, while Joshi’s name did not figure in the first list.
The time had come to officially bury the Vajpayee-Advani BJP and Modi did so with ruthless disregard for the past.
It is ironic that while PM Modi put Vajpayee on a pedestal despite the late prime minister’s obvious disapproval of his handling of the 2002 communal violence in Gujarat, he was merciless with Advani, his mentor and protector through the dark days of the riots.
First, Modi successfully snatched away the Hindutva brand from Advani and cast himself as the ‘Hindu Hriday Samrat’ while communal fires raged in Gujarat.
Advani was left nursing his wounds with just a handful of loyalists. Even they have deserted him over the past five years as Modi established his grip over a party that Advani had built.
The last few years have been cruel to the nonagenarian leader. Once known as a firebrand who kept the Parliament on its toes with skillful interventions and spirited speeches, Lal Krishna Advani is now a pale shadow of his former self.
Yes, Lal Krishna Advani came to Parliament almost every day and sat through the discussions. But he hardly opened his mouth to speak. In fact, records apparently show that Advani hasn’t spoken in the Lok Sabha since 19 December 2014! This is the same man who participated in 42 debates in the previous Lok Sabha when Manmohan Singh was prime minister, and spoke 35,926 words.
Modi’s ascendance as prime minister of the first BJP majority government should have been a matter of pride for Advani.
Yet, when it happened, Lal Krishna Advani seemed unprepared for Modi’s takeover. Somehow, he never came to terms with the fact that he had failed to become prime minister, despite his acknowledged contribution to the BJP’s growth. When the time came for the party to assume leadership of a coalition government, it was Vajpayee who was pulled out of retirement to hold the edifice together, with his skills for consensus-building and outreach across the political spectrum.
When the BJP came to power with a full majority, Modi was in the chair while Advani watched from the sidelines. Perhaps he should have realised then that his time was over. When Vajpayee lost the 2004 election, he called it a day and went into retirement. Advani hung on in hope.
It is unfortunate that a man who contributed so much to the BJP’s growth as a national force has had to exit his political life on a humiliating note. He could have voluntarily stepped back and announced that he would not contest the 2019 polls.
The denial of a ticket to contest the upcoming election is an inglorious end to an illustrious career. Surely, Advani must realise that he has only himself to blame.
(The writer is a Delhi-based senior journalist. This is an opinion piece, and the views expressed are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses, nor is responsible for them.)
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Published: 23 Mar 2019,01:06 PM IST