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Prime Minister Narendra Modi will be in Bengaluru on 11 November, 2022 to unveil the 108-feet statue of Kempegowda, a chieftain under the Vijayanagara Empire who built the city of Bengaluru in the 16th century. This move by the Karnataka government led by Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai is being seen as an attempt by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to woo the Vokkaliga voters a few months before the election scheduled for 2023.
However, with reports of poor infrastructure, lack of developmental work, and flooding continuing to emerge from the Silicon Valley of India, the Congress feels that the people of the state, including the Vokkaliga community members, would not back the governing BJP in the coming elections. Vokkaligas are a dominant caste group in the state and they form at least 14 percent of the state's population.
The Quint spoke to top leaders of the BJP to understand how the party is consolidating the support of this community and what it intends to convey by dedicating a heritage area for the founder of Bengaluru city –Kempegowda, a Vokkaliga icon.
The old-Mysuru region which is dominated by the Vokkaliga community, spreads across 11 districts and accounts for 89 Assembly segments in Karnataka. Traditionally seen as the stronghold of the Congress and JD(S), this region is witnessing a triangular fight since the elections in 2018, with the Vokkaliga votes also experiencing a huge split.
Earlier in 2013, the Congress was the most successful party winning 29 seats. JD(S) won 23 seats and the BJP secured only one seat in core Old-Mysuru region, which includes the districts of Chitradurga, Tumakuru, Chikkaballapura, Kolar, Ramanagara, Mandya, Mysuru, Chamarajanagara, and Hassan.
Given that the Old-Mysuru region is mostly populated by Dalits and Vokkaligas, the Congress which assumed to win most number of seats in the region, lost 12 seats. On the contrary, BJP gained 9 seats and the JD(S) gained 4 seats.
In an interaction with The Quint, about BJP’s plan to build a Kempegowda statue and consolidate the Vokkaliga vote-bank, national general secretary of the BJP CT Ravi said, "Contrary to what Congress does, we are uniting everybody in the name of Hindutva. We are identifying local community leaders who follow the ideology of Hindutva and people are electing them over the candidates picked by Congress or JD(S). We have been successful in Chikkamagaluru, Mysore, Chikkaballapura and other districts, where not just Vokkaligas, but people of all communities have supported us."
However, political scientist Prof Sandeep Shastri opines otherwise. After having observed the state’s electoral patterns for over two decades, Prof Shastri feels that all parties in Karnataka are engaged in competitive appeasement. He also notes that the split in Vokkaliga votes to be an important factor for the BJP or the Congress to plan the next course of action.
Until recently, Kempegowda's legacy was only popular among the Vokkaliga community, which was being harnessed by leaders like DK Shivakumar of the Congress and HD Kumaraswamy of the JD(S). Now, the BJP, which is trying to make inroads into the old-Mysuru region has also been invoking the legacy of the man who built the city of Bengaluru to woo the Vokkaligas.
The wooing of Vokkaligas into the Hindutva ideology and reimagining Kempegowda's legacy comes at a time when Congress is repeatedly asserting the contributions made by Tipu Sultan in the state of Mysore.
The BJP has found itself without a 'hero.' each time the Congress celebrated Tipu Jayanti to garner the support of Muslims in Southern Karnataka.
Now, with the Bommai government's decision to have Kempegowda’s statue in Bengaluru airport, political pundits are seeing this as a strategy to assert a Hindu symbol, as an alternative to Tipu Sultan in Karnataka, that could turn beneficial for the governing party.
The BJP government in Karnataka has invited Prime Minister Narendra Modi to unveil the statue in the second week of November. This is along with inauguration of the newly built terminal at the International Airport in Bengaluru.
In conversation with The Quint, making a sharp critique of the plans made by the BJP, Karnataka Congress Chief DK Shivakumar said, "What kind of tribute is this? The Bengaluru built by Kempegowda and many others after him is in poor condition today. Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai wants to get sacred mud from all the districts of Karnataka for this project. He is not realising that they are polluting the very soil that they stand on today."
Terming Bommai administration's decision to unveil the statue just months prior to the elections, the KPCC president also claimed that BJP's attempts to woo the community would result in a disaster.
"This attempt is nothing but optics. They have never walked in footsteps of people who wished to build a community. People know what the truth is. The saffron party's agenda of appropriating Vokkaligas and Kempegowda will not bear any fruit," he added.
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