The Congress’ social justice platform, centred around the call for equal representation at the caste-level and a nationwide caste census, has been hailed after the Lok Sabha elections this year. But within four months of the general election results, the results of the Haryana Assembly polls have raised questions about how well this messaging has percolated to the lower rungs of the party organisation. Has the Congress internalised its message of social justice? Sudha Pai and Aditi Narayani Paswan discuss the question in a conversation moderated by Abhinay Lakshman. Edited excerpts:
Since the run-up to the Lok Sabha elections, the Congress has been talking about social justice, equal representation, and caste census. We just saw the results of the Haryana Assembly elections. To what extent do you think that messaging has actually gone down with voters, especially Dalits?
There was a bit of overconfidence that the Dalit vote would go to the Congress. In the 2024 elections, the impact of the INDIA bloc was different in different States. In Uttar Pradesh, the Samajwadi Party did well. In Haryana, the Congress and the BJP got five seats each. But later, for the Assembly polls, the BJP was able to gear up, mobilise, and use a certain kind of strategy which got it more Dalit votes.
Aditi Narayani Paswan: During the Haryana Assembly elections, the BJP was micromanaging at the block level. In Haryana, there is the Braj belt, the Jat belt, etc. The BJP kept the social composition in mind. While it was working on social engineering, it also made sure that it fully catered to the local people and their representation in the organisation. This was missing in the Congress.
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Also, people are now moving away from dominant representation. The Congress created disenchantment among the Dalits. It played the caste and Constitution card in national politics, which helped it. But at the ground level, Dalits are more concerned about local issues.
The Congress chose to leverage certain movements to consolidate votes. How do you read those choices in Haryana?
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Then there was the geographical factor. The BJP won 18 urban seats and also had a higher vote share in urban and semi-urban seats. Issues such as Agniveer, the farmers’ agitation, the struggles of the wrestlers, etc. were centered around the rural parts of Haryana.
Sudha Pai: I think the Congress made two mistakes: institutional and strategy-related. In terms of institutional, there was public infighting in the party. Apart from the Hooda and Selja Kumari groups, there were other groups within the Congress. This is not a united party. Whereas, in the BJP, we see unhappiness due to ticket distribution, but ultimately everybody settles down because there is very strong leadership.
In terms of strategy, the Congress did not realise that we cannot now look at Jats and SCs as blocks. Or even farmers, for that matter. There are differences and categories within them; all Jats don’t vote the same way. The BJP mobilised all the non-Jats against the Jats. And the party did this quietly. The Congress did not realise that depending on the Jats is not going to help it because Mr. Hooda has now become unpopular. The BJP targeted the non-Jats and the Other Backward Classes (OBCs). It made Nayab Singh Saini the Chief minister. So, it had a broad strategy of getting support from Dalits, Brahmins, and OBCs, which enabled it to win more seats, whereas the Congress narrowed down on Jats and Dalits alone.
Just ahead of the elections, the Supreme Court cleared the decks for SC sub-categorisation. The Nayab Singh Saini government acted fast, set up a commission, and promised sub-categorisation within a week. On the other hand, Congress was not decisive enough on this. To what extent do you think this allowed for the SC vote to swing towards the BJP?
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This was a missed opportunity for the Congress because it has been talking about a caste census. It should have noticed that in Haryana, the SCs are very unhappy because not only is there high unemployment in general, but there is high unemployment among the SCs. The BJP was very quick on the uptake. Although having said that, the BJP has publicly not said anywhere at the national level that it agrees with what the Supreme Court said or that there should be sub-categorisation.
Why then do you think the BJP went hard on this knowing that it could possibly play into the hands of the Congress’ messaging of a caste census?
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Having said that, the politics of sub-classification played a very important role for the BJP’s victory in Haryana. Because of the message, the non-Jatavs and non-Chamars and Valmikis (also a significant non-dominant SC community) voted for the BJP. The Congress could not understand this. The Congress only spoke about the Constitution, while the BJP went on the ground and did it [set up a committee for sub-categorisation].
As you both said, the heterogeneity of caste groups was key in strategising for Haryana. There was messaging about equal representation from top Congress leaders such as Mallikarjun Kharge, Rahul Gandhi, and Priyanka Gandhi Vadra. So, what went wrong in internalising this social justice messaging that seemed to have worked for the Congress in the Lok Sabha polls?
Aditi Narayani Paswan: The Congress preaches about caste and it is great to see Rahul Gandhi have caste consciousness. It built narratives around caste, but in practice it was missing. During the Lok Sabha elections, the regional parties were more the flag bearers of the Constitution than the Congress. That is why we saw the INDIA bloc do quite well. With the Congress preaching about caste, Ms. Selja should have been given more respect, right? For two weeks, she could not even campaign. This clearly sends out a message that the Congress was sidelining a tall leader. A bigger narrative then came about that the Congress had ignored the Dalit leadership in Haryana, which led to the party’s defeat.
Sudha Pai, Retired Professor, Centre for Political Studies, JNU; Aditi Narayani Paswan, Assistant Professor Lakshmibai College, University of Delhi