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The infighting in BJP’s Karnataka unit has become a giant mess. What began as a tiff between BJP State President BS Yeddyurappa and Leader of Opposition in the Vidhana Parishad, KS Eshwarappa, over the Sangolli Rayanna Brigade, has taken convoluted turns, leaving voters guessing the cause for the dissent in the party.
Adding to the series of masked attacks and counter attacks between the two leaders, Yeddyurappa, on Tuesday, announced K Srinivas Prasad as the party’s new Vice President.
Yeddyurappa has said that the move was made to ensure that Dalits are adequately represented in the party.
What is of import is that Srinivas Prasad is the leader who had defected from the Congress to the BJP. Whilst he was with the grand old party, he had won five elections in the Mysuru belt. However, he lost the Nanjangud seat during the bypoll when he contested as a BJP candidate.
This appointment has added fuel to the fire and created more unrest amongst the Eshwarappa loyalists, giving them another reason to state that Yeddyurappa has disregarded veterans in the party by appointing his sycophants to the party’s highest positions.
To understand the current political unrest in the party, one has to go back to the beginning.
In August 2016, Eshwarappa announced that the Sangolli Rayanna Brigade would begin activities to reach out to the Dalits in the state.
The covert caste one-upmanship between Yeddyurappa and Eshwarappa thus began.
In April 2016, Yeddyurappa was appointed the BJP state President by the national High Command. Following this, his party colleagues were unhappy with his unilateral decisions in appointing office bearers in June of the same year.
On 19 August, Eshwarappa, with the support of Muralidhar Rao, despite the party supremo’s opposition went ahead with the registration of the brigade, an organization meant to represent Dalits and backward castes of Karnataka.
On 4 December, 2016, Yeddyurappa warned party members of stringent action if they supported the Brigade’s activities. Until then the feud was just simmering within the party.
A stubborn Eshwarappa, however, held multiple meetings with his supporters regarding the Rayanna Brigade’s activities, whilst claiming that the organisation was putting in all its efforts to make Yeddyurappa the next Chief Minister.
The two leaders reconciled on multiple occasions earlier and the feud erupted with Eshwarappa’s stance of not shutting down the Rayanna Brigade.
In January, several veteran BJP leaders including Sagodu Shivanna and Bhanuprakash esxpressed disillusionment over Yeddyurappa’s decisions on appointing his supporters to prominent posts within the party.
In the same month, a meeting of disenchanted BJP leaders was held in Tumakuru in Sagodu Shivanna’s residence.
As many BJP veterans were making a noise, BJP National President, Amit Shah, stepped in and a meeting was held in New Delhi on 27 January where Yeddyurappa and Eshwarappa put forth their concerns.
Amit Shah had concluded that the Sangolli Rayanna Brigade’s activities would stop and that Eshwarappa wold be made the President of the BJP’s OBC Morcha.
He had also deemed that Yeddyurappa must hold talks with rebelling leaders and heed to their requests.
The two leaders returned to Karnataka and expressed solidarity and it looked like Amit Shah had worked his magic and had put a stop to petty infighting.
The patch-up between the two leaders lasted only for a few days. The trouble in paradise resurfaced on 11 February, when Eshwarappa once again raised the spectre of the Brigade by holding a meeting with several of its supporters in Bengaluru. “The Sangolli Rayanna Brigade will prove its mettle,” Eshwarappa had said at the meeting.
He said,
Just seven days after this event, the duo’s fickle bromance was on the brighter side and all seemed well in the party until the recent spurt of rebellion.
On 27 April, the Eshwarappa faction held a meeting with rebelling BJP leaders at Palace Grounds in Bengaluru.
The rebel leaders expressed their displeasure against Yeddyurappa for sidelining senior party leaders and workers since the day he took charge. They blamed his unfair party policies for the rift in the party and also for BJP’s loss in the recently held Nanjangud and Gundlupet bye-polls.
As soon as these words were spoken, Puttaswamy went up to the dais and began arguing with Bhanuprakash about Yeddyurappa’s loyalty towards the BJP. The war of words soon turned violent with Esharappa supporters pushing Puttaswamy and other Yeddyurappa loyalists out of the venue.
Just a day after this incident, Puttaswamy was again kicked out of the BJP party office in Mysuru by Eshwarappa loyalists.
An angry Yeddyurappa then let the people in on a glimpse of what was actually behind the rift in the party.
He blamed BL Santosh, an RSS hardliner and BJP National Joint Organising Secretary.
Santhosh, who was an RSS nominee and the BJP Organising Secretary (a powerful post within the organisation), began working in Shimoga during the 2005 election.
According to sources, animosity between Yeddyurappa and Santhosh has been building for years. It is believed that Santhosh had a role to play in Yeddyurappa’s resignation as Chief Minister in 2011, following an adverse report by Lokayukta Justice Santosh Hegde on his involvement in illegal mining. BL Santhosh, some say, was among those who convinced the BJP that it required a clean man at the top, and that Yeddyurappa should resign.
Yeddyurappa claimed that Eshwarappa and Santhosh were holding talks in private. The Lingayat leader soon took off to New Delhi to meet Amit Shah and submit tapes of these meetings.
On Tuesday, Srinivas Prasad took over Bhanuprakash’s post.
On Wednesday, Eshwarappa and his loyalists held a meeting of the Rayanna Brigade in Raichur, while once again claiming that Amit Shah never ordered a check on the Brigade’s activities.
“I am completely loyal to the BJP. Amit Shah never said that the Rayanna Brigade cannot function. He personally told me to continue with its activities,” Eshwarappa told media persons.
The News Minute asked Political Analyst Muzaffar Assadi for his insight into these developments.
He said that although Srinivas Prasad has been made the Vice President of the state unit, it is highly unlikely that the BJP can make inroads into the Dalit vote bank.
“Srinivas Prasad represents only a faction of the Dalits in Karnataka. Most of them are still supporters of the Congress and JD(S). The recently held bye-polls are proof of it. Yeddyurappa appointing him as a face of the Dalits may just be another move in the feud over supremacy,” he added.
Assadi believes that the RSS involvement in this feud may be the reason why the National High Command has been unsuccessful in settling the rebellion.
“Amit Shah’s involvement in the fight bore fruit only temporarily. Considering that the BJP has both Yeddyurappa and the RSS to please, it reflects on why Shah’s orders have been sidelined by Eshwarappa,” he added.
(This article was originally published in The News Minute.)
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