Is expulsion enough for insult to Maya?
The BJP's boorish vice-president has been expelled from the party to assuage feelings.
So low was the personal abuse hurled at the stalwart UP leader Mayawati by a vice-president of the state BJP that the saffron party’s bigwigs quailed in Parliament when a united Opposition tore into it on Wednesday. In the Rajya Sabha, finance minister Arun Jaitley, the Leader of the House, was for once pushed on the back foot. He said, “It is not right and I condemn the use of such words and I will look into this matter...” Ms Mayawati was present in the House and made it clear that a mere expression of regret will not do.
State elections are due in UP in just over six months’ time. If the BJP performs below par, many believe that the countdown for the Modi government at the Centre may just begin. In the event the BJP’s boorish vice-president has been expelled from the party to assuage feelings. Is this adequate retribution for comparing a leading light of the Opposition to a sex-worker?
Leave alone the dalits, whom Ms Mayawati has represented in spectacular fashion for more than a quarter century, would society more broadly think the man who insulted the former chief minister in this singularly vile fashion had received proportionate punishment? The BJP would doubtless be weighing this question as it desperately tries to overcome its image of being an anti-dalit party and takes steps to win over local dalit leaders in UP to break into Ms Mayawati’s stronghold.
The fact that the BJP leader guilty of traducing the country’s most significant dalit voice belongs to an upper caste, complicates the picture for the BJP, which is trying to strike a balance between the upper castes and the traditionally oppressed dalit society which it is trying to woo. In recent times, particularly since the establishment of a BJP government at the Centre, leading figures of the BJP, and the Sangh Parivar, have notched up quite a record in the use of abusive language, especially against minorities and dalits, and have not spared the tallest Opposition leaders, among them Sonia Gandhi. Lines of gender have been crossed, just as in the present instance.
When a junior minister of the Modi government — a sadhvi — used unprintable language against Muslims in a Delhi speech, the PM said he was personally regretful and urged the Opposition not to block Parliament proceedings. That’s the last anyone heard of Mr Modi intervening in such shocking cases. It will be watched with interest if such a pitiable record will be maintained when the crucial UP polls are near.