The Hindu Newspaper Editorial Vocabulary : 12-December-2018 |
A fiercely contested landscape
The Congress has struggled to subdue the BJP in these State elections, but the set-back to the BJP is indisputable
If celebrations have broken out in Congress offices across the
country, few will grudge it considering that its success in the Hindi heartland
comes after four years of defeats, self-doubt and a feeling of being under
siege
by a perennially
turbo-charged
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Yet the Congress’s victory is not without caveats.
It swept only
Chhattisgarh, was stretched to win Rajasthan, and it sweated to be able to be
in a position to lay claim to forming the government in Madhya Pradesh.
It was routed
in Telangana and Mizoram. For the BJP, there may not even be a consolation
prize, in its biggest electoral set-back since capturing power in 2014. For
both the national parties there are also discomfiting portents in the verdict.
The only clear winner
The one winner without a shadow of doubt is K. Chandrashekar Rao of the
Telangana Rashtra Samithi, who decimated the Mahakutumi, or the mega alliance
formed by the Congress and the Telugu Desam Party (TDP) as a possible model for
future Opposition strategy. A return to power for Mr. Rao, who had played a stupendous
role in the birth of Telangana, is remarkable, and all the more for coming
against a combined Opposition.
If there is a second man with a stand-out performance, it is Shivraj
Singh Chouhan, of the BJP but in many ways more than the BJP — at least in Madhya Pradesh where his writ ran for three terms, unchallenged
by the Opposition and, most unusually, almost autonomous of the power duo of
Prime Minister Narendra Modi and BJP president Amit Shah. Mr. Chouhan came within a
whisker of winning outright in M.P., which under him had taken on
the characteristics of an incumbency-advantage State. The longer he
was in power, the more entrenched he seemed to have become. One of
the reasons for this is Mr. Chouhan’s invaluable contribution to agriculture in
a State where 70% of people depend on it. Even so, the near-miracle story had
turned sour
in the last year thanks to the Centre’s intervention to stop bonus for farmers,
and a demonetisation-induced
cash
crunch
that delayed payments down the line. Hours into the counting in M.P., the
suspense lingered,
highlighting that Mr. Chouhan was fighting every inch of the way.
The bigger story of this election may well flow from the outcomes in
Telangana and M.P. The defeat of the Mahakutumi, if not an irretrievable set-back for the
Mahagathbandhan efforts nationally, certainly means that Rahul Gandhi and N.
Chandrababu Naidu, the TDP leader, will have to go back to the drawing board to
rework alliance strategy for 2019. M.P., on the other hand, is an example of a
popular Chief Minister — Mr. Chouhan dominated the posters where he was
compared to Lord Shiva — paying the price for decisions that were not
of his making but were imposed from above by a government that had unconscionably
pushed through measures like demonetisation and the Goods and Services Tax
(GST) without thinking through the double whammy of depriving people of liquidity
while simultaneously subjecting them to an arbitrary and ever-changing tax regime.
The Congress has won in Rajasthan and Chhattisgarh, the latter by a landslide.
In Rajasthan, Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje, written off by most people, held
her
ground
before caving
in.
The Congress’s near loss in M.P. was brought about by a refusal to acknowledge
that it needs partners, in this case the Bahujan Samaj Party. The party will
have to introspect
on its behaviour of seeking alliances where it is too weak to contest by itself
and rejecting them in places where it feels it is in a commanding position.
Steadily losing ground
The latest round of elections reinforces the trend of the BJP losing ground,
which started with its narrow victory in the Gujarat election. In the Karnataka
election that followed, the BJP not only stopped short of an absolute majority
but its patented government formation manoeuvres, successful in many earlier
instances, too bombed.
The party also lost a string of by-polls across the country.
The BJP’s last big victory in an Assembly election was in Uttar Pradesh in
early 2017. In that election, the BJP exceeded the most optimistic projections
to win 312 of 403 seats. The U.P. election provided an insight into the party’s changed
strategy under Prime Minister Modi. In the 2014 general election, which Mr.
Modi single-handedly won for the BJP, his image was of a capitalist-reformer.
He spoke of prosperity and jobs. However, the Modi campaign’s stress on
‘development’ notwithstanding,
it made overt
and covert
attempts to polarise, as for example in Muzaffarnagar in western U.P, the scene
of a horrific communal conflagration in 2013. Indeed, even as Mr.
Modi sweet-talked
the electorate
with lofty
promises, Mr. Shah stoked Hindu passions in that sensitive area,
which earned him a police case as well as a ban by the Election Commission of
India.
In the 2017 U.P. Assembly election, Mr. Modi cast himself as a friend and
saviour of the poor to runaway success. He portrayed demonetisation
as an effort to downsize the rich in favour of the poor. But as the campaign drew
to
a
close,
the old
chestnuts came out and the Prime Minister began to talk the language
of minority appeasement
and Hindu deprivation.
This has since become the BJP’s formula to win elections: a pro-poor
approach combined with an unhidden agenda of communal polarisation. In Gujarat Mr.
Modi spoke of Pakistan’s interest in promoting a Muslim Congress Chief
Minister. He also insinuated that respected Congress leaders,
including the former Prime Minister, Manmohan Singh, were in league with
Pakistan to destabilise
the country. The strategy worked only partially. The BJP barely touched the
half-way mark. In Karnataka, the formula was even less of a success.
In the current round of elections, Mr. Modi and Mr. Shah went a step further
and unleashed
U.P. Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath with the express intention of dividing
the electorate. Mr. Adityanath, whose single claim to fame is his anti-Muslim
approach in all things, did exactly that. In M.P., he said the fight was
between the Congress’s Ali and the BJP’s Bajrangbali (Hanuman). In Hyderabad,
he promised to drive
out Asaduddin Owaisi of the All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen
should the BJP get a majority. It didn’t matter to Mr. Modi or Mr. Shah that
Mr. Adityanath had failed the electoral test in his own State and had lost a
critical by-election in his home turf of Gorakhpur.
The bad news doesn’t end here for the BJP. In a majority of Assembly
elections held since 2014, the BJP’s vote share has dropped well below what it
polled in the Lok Sabha election, a pattern seen in the current elections —
whether in Rajasthan, M.P. or Chhattisgarh, the BJP’s vote
share is nowhere near what it polled in the Lok Sabha.
Looking to 2019
Assuming the vote shares repeat themselves in the Lok Sabha election, the
BJP would lose over 40 seats in these States alone. In north India, the BJP had
reached saturation
levels in 2014, a feat it will be hard put to replicate. In the south, where
the BJP has historically been weak, it looks increasingly like a washout
for the party: the TDP has broken with it while the TRS, with a solid Muslim
vote to draw upon, is clearly unwilling to play ball. In Karnataka, the Janata Dal (Secular)
and the Congress are going steady.
The disenchantment
of the poor is hard to miss, as also the ferment among Dalits and farmers. There’s been
an exodus
of institutional heads, all of whom have given the thumbs down to Mr. Modi’s disastrous
economic policies. But the silver lining for the BJP is Mr. Modi himself. He
continues to be popular through the wavering fortunes of his party.
Courtesy: The
Hindu
01. Fiercely (adverb) – savagely, severely,
aggressively/extremely.
02. Subdue (verb) – conquer, defeat,
overcome/triumph over.
03. Indisputable (adjective) – unquestionable,
undeniable; unequivocal/unambiguous.
04. Broken out (phrasal verb) – flare up,
begin/start suddenly, erupt/burst out.
05. Under siege (phrase) – surrounded/encircled,
besieged/blockaded, under attack.
06. Perennially (adverb) – permanently;
continually, constantly.
07. Turbocharged (adjective) – powerful, strong,
fast/quick, exciting.
08. Caveat (noun) – warning, caution of provision,
condition.
09. Swept past participle of sweep (noun) – win a
contest completely.
10. Lay claim to (phrase) – stake a claim (phrase)
– assert, declare, state (ones right).
11. Routed (verb) – defeat, beat, conquer
completely.
12. Discomfiting (adjective) – humiliating,
upsetting, disconcerting.
13. Portents (noun) – sign/indication, forecast,
prediction.
14. Shadow (noun) – slightest trace/hint/sign.
15. Decimated (verb) – eliminate, remove; to
severely damage or destroy a large part of (something).
16. Stupendous (adjective) – amazing, extraordinary,
impressive.
17. Stand-out (adjective) – very good.
18. Writ (noun) – authority, power.
19. Within a whisker of (phrase) – almost
close/near to doing/achieving something.
20. Outright (adverb) – instantly, immediately,
straight away.
21. Incumbency-advantage (noun) – an advantage one
gets while holding an office.
22. Entrenched (verb) – establish, root/set,
anchor.
23. Sour (adjective) – gone bad, gone off, turned.
24. Demonetisation (noun) – the act of deprive
currency unit (note/coin) of its status as money.
25. Cash crunch (noun) – severe shortage (of
money).
26. Down the line (phrase) – further, later,
unspecified point.
27. Lingered (verb) – continue/carry on,
remain/stay.
28. Every inch (of the way) (phrase) – entirely,
completely; very much so.
29. Irretrievable (adjective) – irreversible,
irreparable, irrecoverable.
30. Paying the price (phrase) – experience the
bad/unpleasant result of something.
31. Unconscionably (adverb) – unethically,
wrongly; excessively/extremely.
32. Double whammy (noun) – (two fold) problem,
difficulty, issue/setback.
33. Liquidity (noun) – liquid assets; cash;
(liquid asset is an asset which can be easily sold/converted into cash without
losing its value).
34. Arbitrary (adjective) – capricious/whimsical,
random, unpredictable/inconsistent.
35. Landslide (noun) – overwhelming, decisive,
grand (victory).
36. Written off (phrasal verb) – disregard,
dismiss, ignore (someone/something as insignificant).
37. Hold one’s ground (phrase) – maintain one’s
position.
38. Caving in (phrasal verb) – yield/surrender,
capitulate, submit/give up (under pressure/strain).
39. Introspect (verb) – examine, analyse, assess
(own/self).
40. Reinforces (verb) – strengthen, bolster up,
fortify.
41. Manoeuvres (verb) – manage, organize, arrange
(something tactfully).
42. Bombed (verb) – fail, be unsuccessful, be
defeat/collapse.
43. String (noun) – series, succession,
chain/sequence (of similar events).
44. Insight (noun) – deep understanding,
realization, recognition.
45. Notwithstanding (preposition) – in spite of,
despite, regardless of.
46. Overt (adjective) – noticeable, obvious,
clear.
47. Covert (adjective) – in secret, private,
confidential.
48. Conflagration (noun) – a large and destructive
crisis (fire).
49. Sweet talked (verb) – tempt/cajole, attract,
mesmerize.
50. Electorate (noun) – all the people who
entitled to vote in an election.
51. Lofty (adjective) – high/tall/grand, arrogant,
disdainful, self-important.
52. Stoke (verb) – incite, encourage, fuel.
53. Runaway (noun) – effortless, decisive,
overwhelming.
54. Drew to a close (phrase) – to come to an end.
55. An old chestnut (phrase) – funny story, joke.
56. Appeasement (noun) – satisfaction, fulfilment,
gratification.
57. Deprivation (noun) – hardship, distress,
destitution.
58. Polarisation (noun) – separation of two
contrasting groups (based on different opinions/beliefs).
59. Insinuate (verb) – imply, suggest, hint.
60. Destabilise (verb) – undermine, weaken,
impair/subvert.
61. Unleashed (verb) – let loose, release, set
free.
62. Express (adjective) – swift, fast,
quick/prompt.
63. Claim to fame (phrase) – noteworthy, strong
point, strength.
64. Drive out (verb) – expel, remove, oust.
65. Home turf (noun) – home ground; habitat,
preferred surroundings of a person.
66. Saturation (modifier) – to a very full extent
(of something).
67. Washout (noun) – failure, disappointment,
let-down/loser.
68. Play ball (phrase) – cooperate, join/come
together, unite.
69. Disenchantment (noun) – disappointment,
dissatisfaction, discontent.
70. Ferment (noun) – furore, agitation, clamour.
71. Exodus (noun) – mass departure, evacuation,
leaving/exit.
72. Thumbs down (phrase) – rejection, refusal,
disapproval.
73. Disastrous (adjective) – not successful,
unprosperous.
74. Silver lining (noun) – consoling and hopeful
aspect of a difficult/unpleasant situation.
75. Wavering (adjective) – flickering, unsteady,
fluctuating.
76. Fortunes (noun) – circumstances, state of
affairs, conditions; success/failure of a organisation over period of time.
Note: All
meanings took from Oxforddictionaries.com and Google.co.in only.
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