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Modi farm U-turn gives divided opponents another chance to uniteSo far, the splintered opposition hasn’t demonstrated an ability to capitalise on the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party’s missteps
Bloomberg
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Farmers held a Mahapanchayat on Monday reiterating that their agitation will only stop when Modi government accepts their other demands. Credit: Twitter/@OfficialBKU
Farmers held a Mahapanchayat on Monday reiterating that their agitation will only stop when Modi government accepts their other demands. Credit: Twitter/@OfficialBKU

By Bibhudatta Pradhan and Archana Chaudhary

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s move to repeal farm reform laws in the face of persistent protests — his biggest policy U-turn since taking office — handed his opponents momentum ahead of crucial state elections. The question is whether they can finally take advantage.

So far, the splintered opposition hasn’t demonstrated an ability to capitalise on the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party’s missteps. Those divisions were apparent last month when a convoy allegedly carrying the son of a top official in Modi’s cabinet drove into a crowd of protesting farmers in Uttar Pradesh, killing eight people in total.

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Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, a scion of India’s once-powerful Nehru-Gandhi dynasty and a leader of the main opposition Congress party, was among the first to reach the crash site. Other Modi opponents in the state, which holds a key election early next year, also raced to the scene. But instead of joining forces, they all held separate rallies.

The competing political events highlighted a key reason Modi continues to dominate Indian politics: Opposition parties have failed to cooperate, effectively splitting the electorate who opposes his Hindu-dominant BJP.

Baljit Singh, 30, a farmer from the state who was at the scene of last month’s violence and voted for the BJP in the 2019 national election, said that he would support anyone other than Modi even after he vowed to repeal the farm laws. But even he wasn’t sure which party he would vote for.

“I am watching the various opposition parties and will give my vote to one of them, but not BJP,” Singh said.

Prior to Modi’s announcement on Friday, which came after yearlong protests by tens of thousands of farmers, his party was on pace to pull out a win in Uttar Pradesh even while losing a significant number of seats. The state, which has about half as many people as the entire European Union, is considered a crucial indicator of national sentiment ahead of the next general election in 2024. The BJP won 77 per cent of seats in the 2017 state election.

Modi’s party is trailing opinion polls in Punjab, where Sikh farmers have been instrumental in the protests. His apology for the farm laws came as the country celebrated the birth anniversary of the founder of the Sikh faith.

“It was clear that farm laws were going to be an irritation point in coming elections,” said Sandeep Shastri, the vice-chancellor of Jagran Lakecity University in Bhopal. “He has made a virtue of a necessity.”

Opposition Inertia

Congress leader Rahul Gandhi was quick to respond to Modi’s speech, tweeting to say “those who feed the nation have peacefully defeated arrogance.” The Samajwadi Party, the BJP’s main rival in Uttar Pradesh also tweeted to call the news of the roll-back a victory for farmers.

But there were no signs from any opposition parties that they would start working together against the BJP, which controls 17 out of India’s 28 states and commands a single-party majority in the lower house of parliament. The Congress party is the lone national opposition, with the rest split between a variety of regional and caste-based political parties.

Discontent has been building among major opposition parties for a while now. Mamata Banerjee, who has run West Bengal for a decade, last month blasted Congress for not taking politics “seriously.”

Last month in Bihar, former chief minister Lalu Prasad Yadav’s party and Congress severed an alliance and both ran candidates in by-elections for local assembly seats, only to lose to the BJP-led ruling coalition. Afterward, Yadav said it was “high time” for all opposition parties to unite under Congress to defeat the BJP.

The farm laws present an issue with nationwide impact: Some 60 per cent of India’s nearly 1.4 billion people depend on agriculture in one way or another. In an interview with Bloomberg News on Monday, an influential farm leader said protests would continue even after Modi repeals the laws as farmers seek price guarantees for all their crops.

“It was a good move by the prime minister but it should have been done much earlier,” said Balwinder Singh, a wheat and rice farmer from Punjab, who has been involved with the protests at Delhi’s border. “He had no other option but to repeal the laws. We would have voted for him if he had repealed the laws without putting us in trouble in the last one year.”

Even before Modi decided to repeal the farm laws, the BJP in Uttar Pradesh had dismissed the opposition’s attempts to capitalise on the tragedy involving the car hitting the protesters. Kaushal Kant Mishra, a party spokesman, described visits from political leaders to the violence-hit district as “political tourism.”

In his address to the nation, Modi said, “I urge all my agitating farmer companions that today is the holy day of Guru Purab and therefore you should return to your homes, fields and to your families. Let's make a fresh start. Let's move forward with a fresh beginning.”

One major problem for the disparate opposition parties is figuring out what they stand for apart from being against Modi, according to Milan Vaishnav, director and senior fellow at the South Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

“Taking the fight to the BJP means a campaign that is sustained and includes affirmative elements,” he said. “In other words, the opposition parties have to offer something positive by way of an alternative vision and not simply just criticize the ruling party.”