The scale and nature of Modi's election victory mean the higher tiers of the Sangh Parivar feel no need for restraint, says Sreenivasan Jain
In April last year, at the peak of the election campaign, I spent an edifying morning following a group of Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh activists straight from their morning shakha (some still in khaki shorts) as they went door to door in Muzaffarnagar town.
The group was constituted of a mix of all the main Sangh Parivar organisations -- the RSS, the Vishva Hindu Parishad, the Bajrang Dal, even the odd Bharatiya Janata Party worker.
Their slogans ranged from "Hindu Hindu bhai-bhai" and "Vande Mataram", to "Ab ki baar Modi sarkar".
The personal pitch to potential voters was equally, if not more direct, along the lines of: "the time has come when Hindus need to unite. Modi is the man for the job" -- a message that seemed to blithely ignore the BJP's official rhetoric of a non-sectarian campaign built around the promise of better governance.
Later, when they broke for tea, I asked them if they would have campaigned with as much enthusiasm for any other BJP leader.
The answer was an emphatic "no".
Modi, they said, was the only one who understood the "pain of Hindus" and could remedy it.
I recall this encounter every time I read a lament from this regime's cheerleaders, some of whom have taken to complaining about how Hindutva extremist views (and agendas) threaten to dent a mandate built solely around the BJP's assertion of -- and voters' demands for -- better governance.
To begin with, it seems acutely delusional to thus reduce the multi-layered campaign and mandate of this election -- especially when it has its core as complex a figure as Narendra Modi, who can be, to his core support base and perhaps even to a wider section of voters, both governance messiah and unabashed majoritarian without any contradiction.
Which is obviously not to deny the possibility that there may have been many, many Indians who voted for the BJP because they saw Modi solely as an effective administrator (or simply because they wanted a change of regime).
But it is safe to say that the RSS' unprecedented participation in the BJP's campaign was not driven solely by excitement over the high rate of MoUs signed during Vibrant Gujarat Summits.
It is equally safe to say -- contrary to the (faux?) surprise of some of his recent admirers -- that it is for these very reasons that the Sangh believes the verdict of 2014, unlike 1999, is a mandate not only for better delivery of bijli-sadak-paani
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