The hardline monk billed as potential successor to Modi

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SUNDAY 13 MARCH 2022

World

The hardline monk billed as potential successor to Modi After a historic victory in the latest state election, chief minister Yogi Adityanath shows how a majoritarian appeal can translate to success in the polls, writes Stuti Mishra

Adityanath has consistently pursued policies that appeal to his Hindu nationalist base (Getty)

Dressed in saffron robes, the hardline monk-turned politician and leader of India's most populous state, Yogi Adityanath entered the stage in Lucknow to mark his victory in the state elections on Thursday surrounded by supporters chanting "Jai Shri Ram" (Hail Lord

Ram). Adityanath, who is the first chief minister of Uttar Pradesh to retain a second term in 37

years, marked the occasion by applying gulaal (colour powder), a ritual for the Hindu festival of Holi, days before the festival as he stood on stage, joining hands with his ministers in a show of unity.

Narendra Modi's Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) won the state, home to more than 220 million people and more voters than in the country of Brazil, with 255 seats out of 403, well above the number required for an outright majority. Although this is 57 seats down from the landslide victory the party recorded five years ago. Nonetheless, the victory sparked celebrations across the major cities of the state, with party workers riding bulldozers to their party offices to chants of "Jai Shri Ram", a slogan that has become synonymous with BJP victory parades in recent years. Other chants hailed

Adityanath's role in the win, such as: "UP mein rehna hai to Yogi-Yogi kehna hai follow Yogi if one has to live in UP" This is a modified version of a slogan Adityanath's supporters have been chanting since he was elected as a member of the legislative assembly in 1998, and has won five consecutive terms since then. In the last five years of BJP rule in UP, Adityanath has consistently pursued policies that appeal to his Hindu nationalist base. He has changed the names of places including cities

like Allahabad and Mughal Sarai to more Hindu-sounding ones, such as Prayagraj and Deen Dayal Upadhyaya. He banned the slaughter of cows, an animal that is holy to Hindus, and also introduced a law against "love jihad", a conspiracy theory among right-wing Hindus that Muslim men deceive women to coerce them into changing their religion. Adityanath's victory comes following alarm calls over the decline of secularism in India and

the rise of Hindutva politics, and in spite of a horrific Covid-19 pandemic and massive farmers' protests that analysts might have expected to play against the incumbent. When India's healthcare system was brought to its knees last summer, dead bodies were seen floating down the rivers of Adityanath's state.

The result has been credited to Adityanath's crackdown on crime and his high popularity among Hindu nationalists, despite uP having a large Muslim demographic of around 20 per cent of the population. It is a victory that will dramatically increase talk among the BJP

faithful about Adityanath as a potential successor to Modi. These state elections, with UP voting alongside four other states, were seen as an important test for the BJP ahead of the general elections in 2024 when Modi will be vying for a third term. And the results were particularly devastating for India's once-formidable National Congress party, the country's oldest political party and the main national opposition to the

BJP.


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