APN News

  • Friday, April, 2024| Today's Market | Current Time: 10:09:49
  • Mizoram Assembly Polls 2018: 12.62 Lakhs people will be an important battlefield for the Congress and the BJP.Assembly

    Published on November 6, 2018

    By Bhupen Goswami

    Guwahati : For a long time in the Northeast, the battle was between the Congress and regional parties. However, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) interrupted the status quo. While it is ruling Assam, Tripura, Manipur and Arunachal Pradesh, it supports coalition governments in Meghalaya and Nagaland. Hence, winning Mizoram polls would help the party achieve its mission of a Congress-mukt (free) Northeast India.But it wouldn’t be easy for BJP to come to power in Mizoram. Around 87 percent of the population is Christian, according to the 2011 census, and reports indicate that Mizos still view the BJP with skepticism.The party has been trying to combine its Hindutva image with a pro-minority face. However, this became challenging after the beef ban. While BJP candidates are making efforts to dispel myths about the party being Satanic for the Christians, Congress is taking advantage of the situation.Prior to polls in Meghalaya, Congress had even launched a campaign saying if BJP comes to power, it will impose Hindutva on Christians. Despite contesting elections in Mizoram five times, things aren’t going the saffron way in the northeastern state. Experts are of the opinion that toppling the present Lal Thanhawla-led Congress government would be a Herculean task for any party. But the fight for Mizoram will not be easy for Congress either. There is anti-incumbency brewing. The Congress-led government has had to face flak on two accounts – state of the infrastructure, and lifting of ban on alcohol. Mizoram’s roads are in a terrible condition, and they have not seen any improvement over the two terms that the Congress has enjoyed there. There are also reports of increased alcohol-related deaths in the state. The Congress lifted the prohibition which existed before. Using these as the platform and challenging the Congress is not so much the BJP, but the MNF (Mizo National Front). The northeastern state has been swinging between Congress and the Mizo National Front (MNF) since 1984 (although with a short President’s rule in 1988). Two Congress leaders recently quit the party to join the MNF. Dr BD Chakma, former minister and a Chakma tribe leader, has recently quit the Congress to join the BJP. Regional parties pose more threat to Congress than BJP. Parties like MNF, National People’s Party (NPP), Zoram National Party (ZNP) and Mizo People’s Convention (MPC) are in the fray. The major opposition party, MNF had formed the government for two terms and its leader Zoramthanga has been twice the Chief Minister of the state. The party is banking on anti-incumbency and their new recruits R Lalzirliana and Lalrinliana Sailo to spice up their campaigns. In the 2008 assembly poll, the Congress won 32 out of the 40 seats with 39 percent voteshare, while the MNF had three seats with 31 percent voteshare. In 2013, the Congress increased both its seat count and the voteshare (34 and 45 percent) while the MNF saw its voteshare decrease to 29 percent but walked away with five seats. In the last Lok Sabha election, Mizoram sent a Congress representative to the parliament – the state’s lone MP. The BJP is trying to create a dent in this otherwise two-head race. Party President Amit Shah spoke to about 7,000 BJP workers in Aizawl and accused the Chief Minister Lal Thanhwala of running “a corrupt and dynastic rule” in the state. He claimed the CM was trying to install his younger brother, currently the health minister, as the next chief minister. Although a small state with only 12.62 Lakhs people on the rolls, Mizoram will be an important battlefield for the Congress and the BJP. While the former will test its ability to hold the only post they currently have in the north east, for the latter it will be the last frontier to be won in northeast India.Meanwhile Mizoram Assembly Speaker Hiphei said that he has resigned from his post, the House, as well as the Congress, just a little over three weeks ahead of assembly elections. He later joined the BJP.Mizoram Speaker Hiphei said on Monday that he has resigned from his post, the House, as well as the Congress, just a little over three weeks ahead of assembly elections. He later joined the BJP. The seven-time Congress legislator said he submitted his resignation letter to Deputy Speaker R Lalrinawma who accepted it. From there, he went to the Congress Bhavan to resign from the primary membership of the party. He is the fifth Congress MLA to resign from the 40-member House since September. Mizoram, the only state in the north-east under Congress rule, will go to polls on November 28. In Guwahati, convenor of the North East Democratic Alliance (NEDA) and BJP leader Himanta Biswa Sarma said Hiphei, 81, will formally join the saffron party in his presence in the Mizoram capital of Aizawl. “He is a very senior leader. His joining the saffron party will greatly strengthen the organisation,” Sarma, who is also Assam finance minister, said. The senior BJP leader, however, did not comment on whether the party will field Hiphei from any constituency in the forthcoming Assembly polls in the hill state. The Congress had earlier named Hiphhei as its candidate for Palak constituency, but replaced him with party general secretary KT Rokhaw last week following reports that he might move to the BJP. Hiphei was elected to the Mizoram Assembly from Palak constituency in 2013. He won the state elections six times between 1972 and 1989 from Tuipang. Mizoram goes to the hustings on November 28, and results will be announced on December 11.

    SEE COMMENTS

    Leave a Reply