BJP's trinity in armoury for Bihar campaign: Pakistan, Art 370, Jinnah

The BJP needed it and the Congress provided it - not one but three electoral issues to attack the opposition.
BJP's trinity in armoury for Bihar campaign: Pakistan, Art 370, Jinnah
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NEW DELHI: The BJP needed it and the Congress provided it - not one but three electoral issues to attack the opposition.

The BJP has decided to mount its attack on the opposition on three issues - Pakistan, Article 370 and Jinnah during the first phase of the Bihar election, say sources within the party. While the top leaders will raise Rahul Gandhi's apparent comparison between Pakistan and India and P. Chidambaram's call to reinstate Article 370, state BJP leaders will drum up the issue of Congress fielding controversial former Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) student leader MaskoorUsmani.

Sources say, if the response is good, it will be the party's campaign strategy in the other 2 phases as well. However, one source added that its star campaigners like Prime Minister Narendra Modi, party chief J.P. Nadda, and Rajnath Singh will also raise issues like BJP's free ration scheme for 80 crore families, the National Education Policy and India's 'successful handling' of the Covid pandemic.

A Delhi-based senior BJP functionary said, "Rahul Gandhi taking Pakistan's side has become a regular thing. It no longer surprises us. But a former Finance Minister promising to reinstate Article 370 is shocking. People of Bihar need to know their stand on Kashmir."

It became clearer when Information and Broadcasting Minister PrakashJavadekar said, "They (Congress) are saying that the decision to abrogate Article 370 was wrong and the Congress will bring it back. Will the Congress say the same thing in the Bihar election? Will they say in their manifesto?" Javadekar went a step further to liken the Congress' position to that of "a few remaining insurgents".

Nadda showed the way by hitting back hard against the Congress immediately on Twitter, calling it Congress' "dirty tricks" allegedly aimed at "breaking India". Nadda also commented on Congress "praising Pakistan" which was a reference to a sarcastic tweet by Congress leader Rahul Gandhi where he posted a GDP growth chart that said: "Another solid achievement by the BJP government. Even Pakistan and Afghanistan handled Covid better than India."

Javadekar also said, "Rahul Gandhi is praising Pakistan. Be it any issue, he likes to praise Pakistan and China. This is the face of Congress." Javadekar also highlighted how abrogation of Article 370 helped bring social justice for the Dalits in the two Union territories of Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh. Incidentally, scheduled castes constitute 15 per cent of Bihar's population, according to the 2011 Census.

The third issue that will be strongly raised in the next few weeks by the BJP is Congress fielding former Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) student leader MaskoorUsmani as a candidate. Already, Union minister from Bihar Giriraj Singh has raised it and BJP sources indicate, state leaders, particularly those campaigning in Darbhanga district, where Usmani is fighting from Jale constituency, will follow suit.

Giriraj Singh said on Friday, "Congress and the Mahagathbandhan leaders have to answer the nation that if the Jale candidate supports Jinnah. Congress and Mahagathabndhan have to say if they also support Jinnah? Will Sharjeel Imam be their star campaigner?"

He was referring to May 2018 when AMU was at the centre of a massive controversy and Usmani came under the scanner when the then BJP Aligarh MP SatishGautam shot off a letter to the university vice-chancellor objecting to a portrait of Jinnah. However, the said portrait was claimed to be hanging since the 1930s. Usmani had written a letter to Modi back then questioning the need for the controversy as such portraits of Jinnah have been hanging in other Indian institutions as well. (IANS)

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