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Prime Minister Modi has not coined a political acronym for a while now. Instead, his style is becoming more alliterative. There is a play on “M” with the battle between a Mazboot (strong, action-oriented, his own) vs Majboor (weak, constrained, Congress-led) government. Or the play on “daar” (identity marker) with Kaamdaar (son of the soil, workaholic, himself) vs Naamdaar (privileged, To The Manor Born, Rahul Gandhi).
But there is a third, unspoken “M” – i.e, Magroor (arrogant, condescending) – that is on display every evening on Modi’s handpicked TV channels where news anchors and BJP spokesmen compete with each other to shout, scream, smear and sneer (you see, two guys can play the alliteration game!).
Read this in Hindi here.
Why, just the other day, two of the “mightiest” news channels proudly put out that “scared by Smriti Irani in Amethi, Rahul Gandhi is planning to fight from three Lok Sabha constituencies”. Of course, minor things like editorial rigour do not matter to these “market leaders”, since nobody bothered to check that Section 33(7) of The Representation of The People Act, 1951, allows a candidate to stand for a maximum of two seats in a poll. And an even more minor issue of human conscience does not matter to these worthies at all, since they glossed over their massive error without offering any apology to the viewers. Leaders, yeah!?
Now last week, a young lady called Priyanka Gandhi stormed into this cozy world of “The 3Ms”, leaving them muddled and muddied (heck, what’s it with my “M”s today? I better shake off my creeping “M”odi-isms … aarrgghh).
Suddenly, the Majboor Congress was on the front foot. It wanted to reclaim its 2009 electoral success (just one general election prior to the black swan poll of 2014), when it got 20 percent of the vote and 21 seats (the second highest at that time) in UP, 15 of which were won in East UP. The Congress party was looking aggressive, sounding confident.
Sumitra Mahajan, the Speaker of the Lok Sabha, became the epitome of the BJP’s panic. By virtue of her office, she is supposed to be non-partisan. Like Caesar’s wife, she has to be seen to be neutral. Therefore, she should not have – actually, cannot – indulge in open and blatant politics. So, it was remarkably improper for her to say that “Rahul has accepted that he can’t do politics all alone and, therefore, he is taking help from Priyanka. It’s a big matter for me that Rahul has finally understood that he can’t handle (the responsibilities)”.
Add some of the other nervous voices emanating from the ruling party, and you get a very eloquent testimony of the bedlam that has gripped the BJP ever since Priyanka Gandhi was announced as an active campaigner for the Congress. Now who is sounding Majboor?
Trapped in confusion, consternation and chaos (oh no, one more alliteration!), BJP spokesmen amped up their vitriol, trying to pass off jittery abuse as counter-aggression.
And quickly on cue, their hand-picked TV channels and anchors joined in the shameless chorus. Just see the quotes and graphic headlines they put out at prime time on that fateful evening:
“Rahul Gandhi, in every index, has been an absolute failure. Rahul may want to restrict her role to eastern UP, but across the Congress, she is already being seen as a better bet than her brother. The proposal to bring Mrs Vadra into a prominent role had been rejected by Rahul himself a couple of years ago; and so, obviously, there is pressure as well as desperation to bring her in now. The Congress knows it’s not working out as nobody wants to be with the Congress.”
“She cannot play martyr about something as fundamentally nepotistic, i.e, the corrupt activities of her husband. Why did the Congress wait for 20 years to unleash the power of Priyanka? Is the Congress now inducting her because it has realised that Rahul alone may not be able to deliver a victory in 2019?”
All of the above nonsense was uttered – no, not by forever prickly BJP spokesmen/women – but by so-called “star journalists”. Facts did not matter. Journalistic ethics did not matter. There was no attempt to analyse this politically-significant event. It was just an orgy of unrestrained calumny and diatribe.
Rahul Gandhi had just delivered a crushing 3-0 blow to Modi in the Hindi Heartland, yet he was repeatedly called a loser. Every opinion poll is showing a near double-digit swing in favour of the Congress, but the party is still “desperate” to save itself. Even after five years of Modi rule, not a single FIR has been filed against Priyanka’s husband, yet he was called corrupt.
Even by the pathetic standards of my fellow television anchors, we had plumbed exceptionally sordid depths.
The Janata government’s Shah Commission resurrected Indira Gandhi in 1980. The Vajpayee government’s India Shining campaign rejuvenated Sonia Gandhi’s Congress in 2004. Now, the Modi government’s uncouth television henchmen will bring Rahul Gandhi’s Congress roaring back to life. Mark my words.
Dear Prime Minister Modi, the least you can do is choose intelligent propagandists!
PS: As I’ve finished writing this on Republic Day, I am bracing for this evening’s prime time shows. Modi’s hand-picked anchors are bound to go ra-ra over the “fifth edition of this spectacular parade which started on 26 January 2015”; because, after all, India was a sub-Saharan village (the Republic Day Parade consisted of bullock carts on a dirt track called Rajpath) until Prime Minister Narendra Modi took charge and created all these fabulous soldiers, guns, tanks and aircraft.
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Published: 26 Jan 2019,07:32 PM IST