Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

BJP’s big political gamble in Odisha

Mohan Charan Majhi is a welcome, radical choice as the party’s first CM of the state

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The BJP’s choice of Mohan Charan Majhi as Odisha chief minister (CM) is remarkable for multiple reasons. The BJP’s first CM in Odisha is only the third tribal to head the government in the state, which has the third largest tribal population in the country. The appointmen­t is also in continuati­on with the BJP’s relentless effort to expand its social base across India, especially among sections of the population, among them Scheduled Tribes (ST), that have largely remained cool to the party’s outreach.

The rise of Majhi, a seasoned Santhal politician from Keonjhar district, marks a rupture in Odisha politics, which has been dominated by the Hindu upper castes. Barring Hemananda Biswal, who served as CM for a few months twice, 1989-90 and 1999-2000, and Giridhar Gamang, a senior tribal leader, who again served as CM for a few months in 1999, Odisha CMs have mostly hailed from the better-developed and more populated coastal region. This time, the BJP won most of the seats in the tribal-dominated districts, where the Sangh Parivar has been active through outfits such as Vanvasi Kalyan Manch for several years. The tribal population has historical­ly backed the Congress or voted for parties that emphasised tribal identity and promised agency to them, as in the case of Jharkhand Mukti Morcha (JMM). The ground is shifting, and the BJP has wielded political office as an instrument to turn it to its advantage. The choice of Droupadi Murmu, also an Odia and also a tribal, for the country’s highest public office, for instance, had a political resonance.

Another factor that may have influenced the BJP’s calculatio­ns is the upcoming assembly elections in Jharkhand. The BJP is facing a perception crisis in Jharkhand following the arrest of former CM and JMM leader Hemant Soren in an alleged land scam, which the INDIA bloc projected as a vindictive action against a tall tribal leader: The last time BJP held office in Jharkhand, it appointed a non-tribal, the current Odisha governor Raghubar Das, as CM. Majhi’s elevation may help dispel this perception to some extent, and convince tribal voters that the party backs leaders from the community. Recently, the party picked Vishnu Deo Sai, a tribal leader, as CM of Chhattisga­rh overlookin­g the claims of many better-known politician­s.

Majhi replaces Naveen Patnaik, who inherited Biju Patnaik’s political legacy, had an uninterrup­ted run as CM for nearly a quarter century, and steered Odisha’s transition from a basket case to one of the fastestgro­wing states in the country. No two leaders could be more different, and that, in fact, could turn out to be an advantage for Majhi. His challenge is to build on the gains the state has made under Patnaik — but leave his own stamp.

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