Kejriwal can teach other opposition parties how to do a BJP on the BJP

by M. K. VENU

Arvind Kejriwal. In the background are campaign posters featuring Narendra Modi and Adityanath, in Uttar Pradesh. PHOTO/PTI. ILLUSTRATION/The Wire

None of the BJP’s stock accusations stick to AAP, and this is a major challenge for the BJP.

Political analysts say the Union government dislikes Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal because he often beats the Bharatiya Janata Party at its own game.

Whatever Kejriwal’s flaws ? and there are many ? the one thing he does really well is to do a BJP on the BJP.

The Delhi chief minister utterly frustrated the BJP’s vast messaging machinery over the past fortnight by diverting attention from the CBI raids over the Delhi liquor excise policy to Aam Aadmi Party’s education policy. Now, few are willing to believe that Delhi deputy chief minister Manish Sisodia is a corrupt man who favoured select private sector entities with liquor licences in return for illegal gratification.

CM @ArvindKejriwal‘s Education Revolution glittering on the front page of the renowned New York Times..

The world watches, as Delhi shows the way forward. pic.twitter.com/9uBQ73sEWb

— Manish Sisodia (@msisodia) August 18, 2022

The unprecedented praise of Sisodia on the front page of the New York Times had the BJP leadership in such a tizzy as they tried to discredit it as paid news. But the paper clarified it was genuine reportage, and made the BJP look like rank amateurs in their messaging as well as their media management.

The BJP is baffled by Kejriwal’s street tactics.

He has put the BJP on the defensive with his allegation that Rs 10 lakh crore of bank loans taken by select businessmen have been written off. He forced the finance minister, Nirmala Sitharaman, to give a formal reply, in which she said that write-offs don’t mean the loans are not being recovered through collaterals.

The fact that Kejriwal forces the Modi government to react formally says something about his capacity to rile.

More recently, in the assembly, he described the BJP as “serial killers of elected governments” of opposition parties. He named all the state governments ? Madhya Pradesh, Karnataka, Goa, Manipur, Meghalaya, Arunachal and Maharashtra ? which have become victims of this serial murder through ‘Operation Lotus’.

Kejriwal explains the modus operandi very simply. He makes the sweeping calculation that the BJP has bought up 270-plus MLAs at the rate of Rs 20 crore per head. He claims that this is what the Union government collects through electoral bonds, in exchange for editing down loans of businessmen friends.

It’s like a schoolteacher breaking down a complex subject with simple, digestible examples.

Kejriwal excels in this form of communication and it troubles the BJP no end. It is helpless because their supreme leader too resorts to such a communication strategy from time to time. But Kejriwal does it better when he is cornered.

The Wire for more