Another view into the subterranean BJP. For those who think of it as just a traditional rightwing party where even some of the hawkish leaders are gaining increasing acceptability in the mainstream, the CD—named Bharat Ki Pukar—is a reminder of the ugly underbelly. It encapsulates all the propaganda that the cadre live by and actually believe. Senior leader Arun Jaitley may look sophisticated every night on TV as he smartly defends the party, but even he admits "all political parties have the loony brigade. Maybe there are a few more in theBJP."
Now, with the threat of an Election Commission reprimand hanging over the party, the spin being given in the Delhi headquarters is that the CD was probably made by an "overzealous" worker out to make a few bucks. And that it was never commissioned or cleared by the leadership. But in Lucknow, veteran leader Keshrinath Tripathi told Outlook that the VCD was produced by the party’s cultural cell. Nevertheless, he hastily adds, "it was yet to be edited and cleared by senior leaders when by mistake someone kept it along with five campaign CDs." Eventually Lalji Tandon, veteran A.B. Vajpayee’s man in Lucknow, released the CD. That is believed to be one of the reasons Vajpayee is in a foul mood and showing no interest in the campaign.
Clearly, the BJP hasn’t learnt that the souffle does not rise more than once. After the Ayodhya high, it’s been downhill for the party in UP. And the only formula it appears to have is to try and create a communal polarisation. Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi denies this and glibly says "we were fighting the election on conventional issues like price rise, terrorism and law and order. It is others who can only see the CD."