India Today

The new gameplan

In the face of a uniting Opposition and widespread social unrest, the RSS and BJP are planning a strategy reboot. It pivots on a new nationalism.

When Prime Minister Narendra Modi hosted a dinner for the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh brass at his official residence on June 14, the discussion revolved around the growing unrest among Dalits, farmers and tribals across the country and how the Opposition was painting an anti-Dalit image of the BJP. Modi stressed on how the party and parivar had to work harder to get the message across to the poor, including Dalits and tribals, about the work done by the Centre for them through schemes like Jan Dhan, Mudra loans, Ujjwala cooking gas and the many insurance plans including the latest, Ayushmann Bharat. Before they left, he told the pracharaks: "Our biggest challenge is to defeat the efforts of the Opposition and anarchist elements who want to divide society by inciting caste passions."

The RSS pracharaks were of much the same mind. In fact, they sensed trouble much before the prime minister expressed his concern that evening. On the first day of 2018, violent clashes had erupted at Bhima-Koregaon, a tiny village near Pune in Maharashtra, during a commemorative event organised by a Dalit organisation. It spread to several parts of the state. In April, the country witnessed protests and clashes in many states following a Supreme Court ruling diluting the provisions of the Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe (Prevention of Atrocities) Act. There have been other major protests, in Tamil Nadu's Tuticorin against a polluting industrial plant; in Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh where tribals have launched the Pathalgadi movement with villagers declaring the sovereignty of gram panchayats.

All these protests are of the sort that India has taken in its stride in the past, the great churn of democracy in play, as it were. But for the ruling BJP, and particularly its spiritual alma mater, the RSS, there's a sinister pattern to it all. The Sangh parivar does not see these as isolated, spontaneous protests. They believe these events are being fuelled by "anti-national elements" such as the Maoists, Islamic extremists, Christian missionary organisations et al, with the backing of the Congress and other political parties inimical to the Sangh. The primary objective of these forces, they maintain, is to destabilise the Modi government, prevent it from getting a second term. They say it's a well-planned conspiracy to divide Hindu society on caste lines.

This is the narrative the RSS

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from India Today

India Today1 min readPolitical Ideologies
What Works For The Two Parties
↘ The Modi factor. There appears to be no viable alternative to the PM, making him the single-largest poll plank for BJP ↘ Well-oiled BJP election machinery and organisation, which has recently delivered Chhattisgarh to the party in the 2023 assembly
India Today1 min read
Deep Dive into Luxury
With a ceramic bezel, a blue lacquer dial bearing the name ‘Deepsea’ in powdered yellow and a luminescent display, this legendary diver’s watch is a standout in both form and function. The Oyster Perpetual Rolex Deepsea comes in 18 carat yellow gold
India Today2 min read
A Sluggish Pace
PRIVATE INVESTMENT, ALONG WITH CONSUMPTION, government spending and exports, is a key component of growth. After the NDA came to power in 2014, private investment increased initially, but soon began to slow down. Total value of completed investment p

Related Books & Audiobooks