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4 ways the Congress won power through Constitutional coups-Food for thought

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Since 2004 the Congress has hung on to power in a situation in which it was on track to be out of power. In each case, the Congress effectively gamed the system through Constitutional coups, argues columnist Rajeev Srinivasan.

23rahul8.jpg




After Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's apparent swansong press conference, it is worth considering exactly how, under his tutelage, United Progressive Alliance-1 and 2 have fared.

In the midst of scams and land-grabs, one remarkable fact stands out -- the curious incidents wherein Congress rule has continued against all the odds. The clever strategists of the Congress have managed to hang on to power despite everyone writing them off.

The 2004 parliamentary election in which the Congress came to power surprised most observers. The National Democratic Alliance, and the chatterati, had expected the country, basking in almost-double-digit GDP growth, to return the NDA to power..

Alas, that was not to be. The results, to refresh your memory, were as follows:

Congress: 145 seats

BJP: 138 seats

Communists: 59 seats

Bahujan Samaj Party: 19 seats

Samajwadi Party: 36 seats

Telugu Desam Party: 5 seats

Rashtriya Janata Dal: 21 seats

... and so on

This was no landslide in favour of the Congress: it only got seven seats more than the BJP. It was the support of the Communists and some others that got the Congress to the magic number of 272..

Somehow, we have forgotten that fact because of the total freedom with which the Congress carried out its scams.

Remarkably, we see the same forgetfulness in today's ecstatic reports about the Aam Aadmi Party: For instance the New York Times gushed about the AAP's 'commanding victory' in Delhi. Victory? Commanding? The AAP came second in a field of three! Such selective amnesia tells a lot about those doing the forgetting and their agendas.

But the point is that the Congress was able to rope in the Communists in 2004 (they chose to give the Congress 'outside support') and run a minority government. Although we forget now, the gigantic scams began in UPA-1, not in UPA-2..

The 2G scam, the cash-for-votes scandal, etc took place during UPA-1. The Communists were indirectly culpable, thus, in the vandalisation of the economy on a large scale.

But it was when the Communists threatened to pull the rug out from under them with the India-US nuclear 'deal' as backdrop that the Congress first rolled out its clever new tactic: The Constitutional coup..

To give credit where it is due -- and I am not exactly an admirer of the Congress -- the party has perfected the black art of Constitutional coups.

What exactly is a Constitutional coup?

Like a normal coup d'eat, it enables some group to take over a State; however, instead of violence, a Constitutional coup takes advantage of some loophole to effect a bloodless takeover, although it is indeed subverting the putative will of the people..

This is what happens when rulers manipulate election results -- for instance, it is alleged that Hun Sen did this in the Cambodian elections in 2013.

I can think of at least four Constitutional coups that the Congress has pulled off successfully:

The 2008 cash-for-votes scam with which they overcame a no-confidence motion that would surely have toppled them;
The 2009 election in which considerable circumstantial evidence suggests that the party may have stolen the election by tampering with Electronic Voting Machines;
The hounding and harassing of B S Yeddyurappa in 2011 with the sole intent of toppling the BJP government in Karnataka. The courts later exonerated him;
The use of the Aam Aadmi Party as a fig leaf to retain effective power in Delhi in 2013.

In each of these, the Congress has managed to hang on to, or to capture, power in a situation in which it was on track to be out of power. In each case, the party effectively gamed the system and subverted the checks and balances..

In addition, there is always a quality of mystery -- almost of the miraculous -- about the last-minute reprieve that the Congress got. Well, as they say, if something is too good to be true, it usually is.

First, cash for votes. The minority UPA-1 government was on the verge of collapsing in 2008, when they went on a bribing spree, allegedly offering crores of rupees in cash to quite a few Opposition MPs..

This sting was caught on camera, and MPs brandished in Parliament the bundles of currency notes they were given. It appeared to be an open-and-shut case of perversion of the rules of parliamentary conduct..

The Speaker had just disqualified a couple of MPs for the relatively minor crime of taking money to ask specific questions; thus it appeared as though the impugned Congress politicians would be censured and prevented from voting.

However, at the last minute, the Speaker refused to take cognisance of the alleged bribes; the television channel that had the tapes refused to broadcast them; and the Congress won the confidence vote. Truly miraculous indeed..

Yes, Constitutional coup number one -- the Constitution had been violated with impunity.

Second, the 2009 election. Coming as it did just after the 26/11 terror attacks and hostage-taking by Pakistanis in Mumbai, one would have thought the Congress and its friends, who did such a poor job in managing the attack, and an even poorer one in forcing the Pakistanis to bring the handlers to justice, would have caused a backlash from the public.

On the contrary, the Congress won more seats. There had been chatter on the Internet that a group of hackers had been recruited from the US to manipulate the Electronic Voting Machines..

Furthermore, strange things happened: Monu Nalapat, a journalist and professor, reported that he was able to find the results on the Election Commission page before counting started, and there has never been a satisfactory explanation for that.

A major politician was trailing by 30,000 votes coming into the final stretch. Then, lo! an apparent miracle happened, and he won. There is a pending court case about this incident.

EVMs are highly insecure, and for this reason the Germans, the Dutch and the Californians have all banned them. A few computer scientists figured out how to hack the Indian EVMs (they are quite primitive). Instead of being felicitated, one of them was jailed, for the absurd 'crime' of procuring an EVM (he was forced to, as the Election Commission wouldn't give him one to test)..

Finally, the Supreme Court has forced the use of EVMs with a printed receipt to enable manual recounts if needed: A digital record is obviously not secure and can be spoofed.

The computer scientists further showed that the EVMs could be decked out with a radio-sensitive chip, so that a person at some distance with a cellphone could trigger a Trojan Horse programme to quietly transfer votes to the preferred candidate..

Thus, the modus operandi could be simplified -- only a few compromised EVMs, and a few in-the-know people who could drive around to the compromised EVMs and enable the programme from their cars when nearby.

If this suspicion is true, then the 2009 election may have been stolen. Constitutional coup number Two.

Third, the strange case of B S Yeddyurappa. The Congress was extremely unhappy that the BJP -- viewed as a Hindi-cowbelt party -- had managed to gain a foothold in the South, thanks mostly to Yeddy's clever tactics. So what's a resourceful party to do? Non-stop harassment! .

Governor H R Bharadwaj was sent to Bangalore with a single-point agenda: Get Yeddy out, by hook or by crook. So the governor and the Lokayukta hounded Yeddy, slapping all sorts of cases on him.

The paid media got into the act, spilling oceans of ink on painting Yeddy as the biggest villain since, well... Al Capone. There was shrill, sanctimonious coverage of the Mangalore incident wherein a group called the Sri Rama Sene rescued some young women who were apparently being 'groomed'.

In fact, Yeddy's alleged crimes (land grabs) were misdemeanours, easily topped by any one of felonies (CWG, 2G, Adarsh, etc) under Manmohan Singh's watch. Yet there was no uproar asking Singh to resign, unlike Yeddy..

By causing the BJP -- gullible BJP -- to expel him, and thus split the anti-Congress vote, the Congress was able to come back to power. Fiendishly clever.

And now comes a Supreme Court judgment exonerating Yeddy. Why isn't Yeddy suing for defamation, character assassination and libel?.

Anyway, the damage has been done and the BJP can no longer use Karnataka as a springboard into the rest of the South: Mission accomplished.

Also, I didn't see anything but a very cursory report of the court ruling in the media. There is in fact very little coverage of Karnataka now -- I guess Omerta is the name of the game now that the Congress is ruling the state, and nothing bad is supposed to get publicity.

Fourth, the curious case of the Aam Aadmi Party. Since the principal effect of the AAP entering politics is to split the anti-Congress vote, it is likely that there is some 'understanding' between the two parties.

There were rumours of secret meetings in smoke-filled rooms. The alacrity with which the Congress supported an AAP power-grab, and the alacrity with which the latter accepted, suggest this was pre-planned. Constitutional coup Number Four.

So, the AAP is a Congress proxy, and a particularly nasty embodiment of that motley crew called the NAC (National Advisory Council), which has created some of the most dangerous legislation in recent memory.

If anything, the AAP is even more lunatic-Left than the NAC. Its policy pronouncements are startlingly bad, but clearly the Congress is not bothered, so long as they have prevented the BJP from ruling Delhi.

Indeed, the foreign media has been singing the AAP song for a few months: The Economist, The New York Times, etc have been cheerleading for the AAP and Arvind Kejriwal. Which leads to the question of why they have so much benign interest in Indian politics all of a sudden. The curious incident of the dog in the night-time comes to mind.

The Congress is, in effect, back in power in Delhi. All that has happened is that the unlamented Sheila Dikshit has been thrown under the bus. And the entire media apparatus is now full of starry-eyed stories about how wonderful the AAP is, and how their leader is going to defeat Narendra Modi by astroturfing an army of volunteers in major metros and eating into the anti-incumbency vote, thus paving the way for Rahul Gandhi to be anointed prime minister in May.

The frightening thing is that this scenario may indeed happen: By virtue of clever tactics, the Congress may well steal 2014 more subtly than with downright EVM fraud. And that would be a sad day indeed..

In 2009, I predicted gloom and doom and the evisceration of the Indian economy. It turns out I was not pessimistic enough.

But if UPA-3 becomes a reality, by 2025 India may well be Balkanised into a Greater Bangladesh, a seceding Northeast, a Kashmir ceded to Pakistan (Manmohan Singh hinted darkly about an 'important breakthrough' that he almost secured), an Arunachal Pradesh and Ladakh grabbed by China. And the Indian voter will have only himself to blame.




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All Indian members holding various political perspectives , what are your opinions ?

Is the AAM AADMI PARTY unwitting cattle to Congress's grand political schemes ?

and are the threats envisioned by the columnist exaggerated ?

There seems to be a scenario in which congress is persistently exploiting constitutional loopholes to retain power.

Again the issue of EVMs or voting machines , if be so susceptible to tamper , is disconcerting.
 
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Am aware of this , that is why they are bringing AAP so non congress votes will be switched to AAP so it does not look forged...
IF Congress wins this election then it would have been obvious to people that the polls were forged ....

Subramaniam swamy is single handedly responsible for the recipt on EVM machines ... He recently told 3000 crores was alloted by congress for EVM fraud.. I honestly believe there will be EVM fraud and votes in urban areas will go to AAP....

Either way , all the truth is coming out into the open .. if this continues then you can very much expect an uprising..
 
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I believe the AAP bubble will burst pretty fast, You can allready see it in News outlets comments section how more than 90% of responders hate AAP , even if Congress or 3rd front comes to power it wont last for more than an year in which time the Congress would have used all its cards ....
 
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Stupid article. Congress never had any domestic problems from 2004-2009. In fact it came stronger.
 
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There is no dicussion about modi these days in the media which clearly matches to what the author says . I hope the last paragraph of article not to happen
 
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Since 2004 the Congress has hung on to power in a situation in which it was on track to be out of power. In each case, the Congress effectively gamed the system through Constitutional coups, argues columnist Rajeev Srinivasan.

23rahul8.jpg




After Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's apparent swansong press conference, it is worth considering exactly how, under his tutelage, United Progressive Alliance-1 and 2 have fared.

In the midst of scams and land-grabs, one remarkable fact stands out -- the curious incidents wherein Congress rule has continued against all the odds. The clever strategists of the Congress have managed to hang on to power despite everyone writing them off.

The 2004 parliamentary election in which the Congress came to power surprised most observers. The National Democratic Alliance, and the chatterati, had expected the country, basking in almost-double-digit GDP growth, to return the NDA to power..

Alas, that was not to be. The results, to refresh your memory, were as follows:

Congress: 145 seats

BJP: 138 seats

Communists: 59 seats

Bahujan Samaj Party: 19 seats

Samajwadi Party: 36 seats

Telugu Desam Party: 5 seats

Rashtriya Janata Dal: 21 seats

... and so on

This was no landslide in favour of the Congress: it only got seven seats more than the BJP. It was the support of the Communists and some others that got the Congress to the magic number of 272..

Somehow, we have forgotten that fact because of the total freedom with which the Congress carried out its scams.

Remarkably, we see the same forgetfulness in today's ecstatic reports about the Aam Aadmi Party: For instance the New York Times gushed about the AAP's 'commanding victory' in Delhi. Victory? Commanding? The AAP came second in a field of three! Such selective amnesia tells a lot about those doing the forgetting and their agendas.

But the point is that the Congress was able to rope in the Communists in 2004 (they chose to give the Congress 'outside support') and run a minority government. Although we forget now, the gigantic scams began in UPA-1, not in UPA-2..

The 2G scam, the cash-for-votes scandal, etc took place during UPA-1. The Communists were indirectly culpable, thus, in the vandalisation of the economy on a large scale.

But it was when the Communists threatened to pull the rug out from under them with the India-US nuclear 'deal' as backdrop that the Congress first rolled out its clever new tactic: The Constitutional coup..

To give credit where it is due -- and I am not exactly an admirer of the Congress -- the party has perfected the black art of Constitutional coups.

What exactly is a Constitutional coup?

Like a normal coup d'eat, it enables some group to take over a State; however, instead of violence, a Constitutional coup takes advantage of some loophole to effect a bloodless takeover, although it is indeed subverting the putative will of the people..

This is what happens when rulers manipulate election results -- for instance, it is alleged that Hun Sen did this in the Cambodian elections in 2013.

I can think of at least four Constitutional coups that the Congress has pulled off successfully:

The 2008 cash-for-votes scam with which they overcame a no-confidence motion that would surely have toppled them;
The 2009 election in which considerable circumstantial evidence suggests that the party may have stolen the election by tampering with Electronic Voting Machines;
The hounding and harassing of B S Yeddyurappa in 2011 with the sole intent of toppling the BJP government in Karnataka. The courts later exonerated him;
The use of the Aam Aadmi Party as a fig leaf to retain effective power in Delhi in 2013.

In each of these, the Congress has managed to hang on to, or to capture, power in a situation in which it was on track to be out of power. In each case, the party effectively gamed the system and subverted the checks and balances..

In addition, there is always a quality of mystery -- almost of the miraculous -- about the last-minute reprieve that the Congress got. Well, as they say, if something is too good to be true, it usually is.

First, cash for votes. The minority UPA-1 government was on the verge of collapsing in 2008, when they went on a bribing spree, allegedly offering crores of rupees in cash to quite a few Opposition MPs..

This sting was caught on camera, and MPs brandished in Parliament the bundles of currency notes they were given. It appeared to be an open-and-shut case of perversion of the rules of parliamentary conduct..

The Speaker had just disqualified a couple of MPs for the relatively minor crime of taking money to ask specific questions; thus it appeared as though the impugned Congress politicians would be censured and prevented from voting.

However, at the last minute, the Speaker refused to take cognisance of the alleged bribes; the television channel that had the tapes refused to broadcast them; and the Congress won the confidence vote. Truly miraculous indeed..

Yes, Constitutional coup number one -- the Constitution had been violated with impunity.

Second, the 2009 election. Coming as it did just after the 26/11 terror attacks and hostage-taking by Pakistanis in Mumbai, one would have thought the Congress and its friends, who did such a poor job in managing the attack, and an even poorer one in forcing the Pakistanis to bring the handlers to justice, would have caused a backlash from the public.

On the contrary, the Congress won more seats. There had been chatter on the Internet that a group of hackers had been recruited from the US to manipulate the Electronic Voting Machines..

Furthermore, strange things happened: Monu Nalapat, a journalist and professor, reported that he was able to find the results on the Election Commission page before counting started, and there has never been a satisfactory explanation for that.

A major politician was trailing by 30,000 votes coming into the final stretch. Then, lo! an apparent miracle happened, and he won. There is a pending court case about this incident.

EVMs are highly insecure, and for this reason the Germans, the Dutch and the Californians have all banned them. A few computer scientists figured out how to hack the Indian EVMs (they are quite primitive). Instead of being felicitated, one of them was jailed, for the absurd 'crime' of procuring an EVM (he was forced to, as the Election Commission wouldn't give him one to test)..

Finally, the Supreme Court has forced the use of EVMs with a printed receipt to enable manual recounts if needed: A digital record is obviously not secure and can be spoofed.

The computer scientists further showed that the EVMs could be decked out with a radio-sensitive chip, so that a person at some distance with a cellphone could trigger a Trojan Horse programme to quietly transfer votes to the preferred candidate..

Thus, the modus operandi could be simplified -- only a few compromised EVMs, and a few in-the-know people who could drive around to the compromised EVMs and enable the programme from their cars when nearby.

If this suspicion is true, then the 2009 election may have been stolen. Constitutional coup number Two.

Third, the strange case of B S Yeddyurappa. The Congress was extremely unhappy that the BJP -- viewed as a Hindi-cowbelt party -- had managed to gain a foothold in the South, thanks mostly to Yeddy's clever tactics. So what's a resourceful party to do? Non-stop harassment! .

Governor H R Bharadwaj was sent to Bangalore with a single-point agenda: Get Yeddy out, by hook or by crook. So the governor and the Lokayukta hounded Yeddy, slapping all sorts of cases on him.

The paid media got into the act, spilling oceans of ink on painting Yeddy as the biggest villain since, well... Al Capone. There was shrill, sanctimonious coverage of the Mangalore incident wherein a group called the Sri Rama Sene rescued some young women who were apparently being 'groomed'.

In fact, Yeddy's alleged crimes (land grabs) were misdemeanours, easily topped by any one of felonies (CWG, 2G, Adarsh, etc) under Manmohan Singh's watch. Yet there was no uproar asking Singh to resign, unlike Yeddy..

By causing the BJP -- gullible BJP -- to expel him, and thus split the anti-Congress vote, the Congress was able to come back to power. Fiendishly clever.

And now comes a Supreme Court judgment exonerating Yeddy. Why isn't Yeddy suing for defamation, character assassination and libel?.

Anyway, the damage has been done and the BJP can no longer use Karnataka as a springboard into the rest of the South: Mission accomplished.

Also, I didn't see anything but a very cursory report of the court ruling in the media. There is in fact very little coverage of Karnataka now -- I guess Omerta is the name of the game now that the Congress is ruling the state, and nothing bad is supposed to get publicity.

Fourth, the curious case of the Aam Aadmi Party. Since the principal effect of the AAP entering politics is to split the anti-Congress vote, it is likely that there is some 'understanding' between the two parties.

There were rumours of secret meetings in smoke-filled rooms. The alacrity with which the Congress supported an AAP power-grab, and the alacrity with which the latter accepted, suggest this was pre-planned. Constitutional coup Number Four.

So, the AAP is a Congress proxy, and a particularly nasty embodiment of that motley crew called the NAC (National Advisory Council), which has created some of the most dangerous legislation in recent memory.

If anything, the AAP is even more lunatic-Left than the NAC. Its policy pronouncements are startlingly bad, but clearly the Congress is not bothered, so long as they have prevented the BJP from ruling Delhi.

Indeed, the foreign media has been singing the AAP song for a few months: The Economist, The New York Times, etc have been cheerleading for the AAP and Arvind Kejriwal. Which leads to the question of why they have so much benign interest in Indian politics all of a sudden. The curious incident of the dog in the night-time comes to mind.

The Congress is, in effect, back in power in Delhi. All that has happened is that the unlamented Sheila Dikshit has been thrown under the bus. And the entire media apparatus is now full of starry-eyed stories about how wonderful the AAP is, and how their leader is going to defeat Narendra Modi by astroturfing an army of volunteers in major metros and eating into the anti-incumbency vote, thus paving the way for Rahul Gandhi to be anointed prime minister in May.

The frightening thing is that this scenario may indeed happen: By virtue of clever tactics, the Congress may well steal 2014 more subtly than with downright EVM fraud. And that would be a sad day indeed..

In 2009, I predicted gloom and doom and the evisceration of the Indian economy. It turns out I was not pessimistic enough.

But if UPA-3 becomes a reality, by 2025 India may well be Balkanised into a Greater Bangladesh, a seceding Northeast, a Kashmir ceded to Pakistan (Manmohan Singh hinted darkly about an 'important breakthrough' that he almost secured), an Arunachal Pradesh and Ladakh grabbed by China. And the Indian voter will have only himself to blame.




-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All Indian members holding various political perspectives , what are your opinions ?

Is the AAM AADMI PARTY unwitting cattle to Congress's grand political schemes ?

and are the threats envisioned by the columnist exaggerated ?

There seems to be a scenario in which congress is persistently exploiting constitutional loopholes to retain power.

Again the issue of EVMs or voting machines , if be so susceptible to tamper , is disconcerting.


UPA 1 happened and credit goes to only one person and that is Sonia Gandhi ( Not that I like her ....but it has to be accepted that she single handedly launched Congress campaign ....opposite the confident NDA campaign led by Atal Bihari Vajpayee ....the biggest turning point was the alliance that Sonia Gandhi stitched up !

If ....and only if BJP had allied with DMK that time ....NDA II would have had happened .

all credit goes to Sonia Gandhi and her 'close' political advisors ....which formed and alliance that managed to turn tables in game of numbers in what was obviously hung parliament ....

No doubt about the first point that Congress won No confidence motion in 2008 by sheer money -power....

I highly doubt other claims although .

Congress did equally dismal job during UPA1 but the biggest game changer was the 'timed' farmer loan waiver ....

the political gimmick played huge dividends ...UPA won handsomely in rural areas ....paving way for thumping comeback for UPA.


I doubt the veracity of claims about EVM hacking thing ...! It may be possible but I doubt if that's what happened ...

We have to give credit to Election commission for carrying out general elections on such mammoth scale without significant glitches ....and in rather non partisan way .


The outcome of 2014 is still wide open....however NDA has better chances this time ....

But Indian elections can throw some surprising results.....given its inherent complexity .

I will not be too shocked if Congress manages to cling to the power through Third front ...

Another experiment of Third front government will spell disaster for India .


I hope and pray that NDA comes to power and sets economy right !

Economy in engine of nation ....

if economy continues to cools down ...then this nation can't move ahead ...and everything including its defense will suffer a huge setback .

and only stable government with right people at the helm can ensure that economy is brought back on the track ....
 
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AAP has been formed to divide NDA's votes. :hitwall:

I don't believe it ....

AAP has been expression of frustration of people with corrupt UPA and impotent NDA ....

There had been virtual political vacuum in Delhi ....The scams after scams tumbling one after another ....unfortunately BJP could not and did not capitalize ( which rather surprises and shocks me ...)

In many states like Maharashtra ....Congress has remained in power despite inefficient and corrupt government because there is no alternative ....BJP + Shiv Sena in Maharashtra have been virtually toothless ...

People had been fade up with this and were looking for hope ....

Arvind kejriwal banking on this mass frustration and anger catalyzed political faction out of India against corruption movement ...

This was a spontaneous movement .... infact it was supported initially by BJP ...BJP thought that mass uprising against corruption will bring UPA government down and anti congress wave will benefit it directly ... Little they had imagined that this movement will give birth to new party which may damage its own prospects in long term ....

I therefore totally disagree with this assertion that AAP was formed to eat into BJP votes ....It will end up doing that ...there is no doubt about that however !!!

I personally believe that emergence of AAP is something nice that has happened after long time on Indian political scene ...!!!
 
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The people of our country cannot escape responsibility. Keeping the Indian voter in mind - I am quite sure Congress-AAP combine will come to the Center. Unless there is some miracle. I am already looking for uninhabited islands to lay claim to.
 
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There is no dicussion about modi these days in the media which clearly matches to what the author says . I hope the last paragraph of article not to happen

You can't take media as mirror of public opinion ....some overuse fatigue is bound to happen ....Modi has life -time opportunity ....it is now or never for him.....This is the closest he can be brought by BJP. In fact BJP risked a gamble by declaring his candidature for PM post early and lost one of the longest ally in the process ...

Now it is Narendra modi's battle ...and as far as I can tell he is fighting hard ...making whirlwind tours across lengths and breadth of country ...bringing estranged fellows back ... creating space for new alliances....

as far as or media is concerned, it acts like teenager gone berserk ....!

You can't gauge pulse of nation just based on media alone ....

Don't form your opinions based on media reports 'alone' ....
 
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AAP has been formed to divide NDA's votes. :hitwall:

I dont think so.

BJP has traditional vote share, a more right wing in thoughts.

Congress gets vote of those who dont concur with BJP type of politics. AAP will damage that vote share more than it will harm BJP.

Even if you look into Delhi poll, AAP gets the vote which otherwise had gone to congress in earlier polls. BJP still holds its ground though not that well.

The only fear is BJP not getting that much seat that she wants to but that will happen only when AAP candidate wins BJP seat not just contesting.
 
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First of all the bjp do not contest in almost 200 seats in the general elections, secondly if the congress managed to stay in power you cant blame them , whats the bjp doing ? how can they run the country if they cant even form alliances?
 
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