The Prague Post - Modi woos south in bid for pan-India ride to power

EUR -
AED 4.332899
AFN 77.275648
ALL 96.686263
AMD 450.161403
ANG 2.112358
AOA 1081.897665
ARS 1711.339984
AUD 1.760355
AWG 2.123976
AZN 2.007162
BAM 1.955556
BBD 2.375493
BDT 144.120782
BGN 1.956612
BHD 0.444865
BIF 3492.275111
BMD 1.179823
BND 1.515511
BOB 8.179048
BRL 6.51345
BSD 1.179448
BTN 105.788687
BWP 15.524061
BYN 3.421973
BYR 23124.524384
BZD 2.372124
CAD 1.614658
CDF 2595.610282
CHF 0.928792
CLF 0.027302
CLP 1071.066937
CNY 8.292387
CNH 8.280355
COP 4431.508344
CRC 583.237057
CUC 1.179823
CUP 31.265301
CVE 110.962338
CZK 24.30417
DJF 209.678513
DKK 7.469676
DOP 73.886383
DZD 152.968707
EGP 56.011377
ERN 17.69734
ETB 183.217946
FJD 2.677256
FKP 0.876763
GBP 0.87301
GEL 3.167881
GGP 0.876763
GHS 13.550258
GIP 0.876763
GMD 87.894554
GNF 10309.87058
GTQ 9.035872
GYD 246.751279
HKD 9.175965
HNL 31.100339
HRK 7.536234
HTG 154.56201
HUF 390.525433
IDR 19752.532194
ILS 3.759128
IMP 0.876763
INR 105.563867
IQD 1545.567701
IRR 49700.029855
ISK 147.996725
JEP 0.876763
JMD 188.606448
JOD 0.836517
JPY 184.061782
KES 152.092713
KGS 103.175679
KHR 4731.089096
KMF 493.165741
KPW 1061.794403
KRW 1738.810595
KWD 0.362253
KYD 0.982877
KZT 600.810068
LAK 25519.564217
LBP 105361.504251
LKR 365.102861
LRD 209.649859
LSL 19.690998
LTL 3.48371
LVL 0.713663
LYD 6.400545
MAD 10.770306
MDL 19.849521
MGA 5379.991765
MKD 61.57045
MMK 2477.445064
MNT 4192.393361
MOP 9.4489
MRU 46.933533
MUR 54.236734
MVR 18.228361
MWK 2049.35221
MXN 21.122826
MYR 4.794779
MZN 75.40248
NAD 19.691603
NGN 1723.425961
NIO 43.12274
NOK 11.832725
NPR 169.262298
NZD 2.019054
OMR 0.453643
PAB 1.179463
PEN 3.969515
PGK 5.0172
PHP 69.426705
PKR 330.526898
PLN 4.222013
PYG 8035.996525
QAR 4.295747
RON 5.090701
RSD 117.41128
RUB 92.028098
RWF 1713.102521
SAR 4.425052
SBD 9.619556
SCR 17.071754
SDG 709.670433
SEK 10.811783
SGD 1.514721
SHP 0.885173
SLE 28.404275
SLL 24740.295858
SOS 674.227148
SRD 45.210519
STD 24419.947271
STN 25.071232
SVC 10.319711
SYP 13045.175917
SZL 19.691097
THB 36.704247
TJS 10.850837
TMT 4.141178
TND 3.404376
TOP 2.84073
TRY 50.553437
TTD 8.023066
TWD 37.169839
TZS 2916.195985
UAH 49.663798
UGX 4261.485918
USD 1.179823
UYU 46.064248
UZS 14216.863469
VES 339.893739
VND 31065.910794
VUV 143.397352
WST 3.284608
XAF 655.875099
XAG 0.016434
XAU 0.000262
XCD 3.18853
XCG 2.125653
XDR 0.817374
XOF 656.572986
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.328933
ZAR 19.684398
ZMK 10619.81597
ZMW 26.654897
ZWL 379.902419
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    80.22

    0%

  • NGG

    0.8300

    77.24

    +1.07%

  • CMSD

    -0.1800

    23.02

    -0.78%

  • BCE

    0.0000

    22.73

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.1100

    23.01

    -0.48%

  • GSK

    0.2600

    48.85

    +0.53%

  • BCC

    -1.0000

    73.23

    -1.37%

  • RIO

    0.8700

    80.97

    +1.07%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    13.06

    +1.38%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.41

    +0.3%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    15.53

    +0.19%

  • RELX

    0.1500

    41.13

    +0.36%

  • BP

    0.4400

    34.58

    +1.27%

  • AZN

    0.5900

    92.14

    +0.64%

  • BTI

    0.2700

    57.04

    +0.47%

Modi woos south in bid for pan-India ride to power
Modi woos south in bid for pan-India ride to power / Photo: Idrees MOHAMMED - AFP

Modi woos south in bid for pan-India ride to power

Few doubt Narendra Modi will win re-election in India's marathon polls starting this month -- the question is how far the prime minister will succeed in wooing the wealthier and better-educated south.

Text size:

After a decade in power, Modi hopes to significantly increase his Bharatiya Janata Party's (BJP) 55 percent parliamentary majority -- and to do that requires winning in southern states.

Modi's Hindu-nationalist BJP won 303 of 543 seats in the lower house of parliament in 2019, but mainly from the populous, poorer, Hindi-speaking north.

Holding repeated rallies across the south, Modi has sought to win new voters, offering his "topmost respect" to the south's Tamil culture and language, including wearing the region's traditional white wrap, waving from open-topped convoys in flower-strewn parades.

Modi has also launched a social media handle in Tamil, to win over those who see the BJP dominated by northern Hindi speakers.

But the BJP's push faces serious headwinds in the south, where voters typically back regional parties strongly rooted in appeals to social justice, and Modi's muscular Hindu nationalism holds little appeal.

"We give respect to people not depending on religion or caste," 38-year-old Abu Backer, a steel business owner in Tamil Nadu state, said proudly.

- 'Harmonised' religions -

Palanivel Thiaga Rajan, Tamil Nadu's information technology minister -- commonly known by his initials PTR -- said he hated seeing "polarisation" in politics.

Rajan, from Tamil Nadu's ruling Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) party -- which won 23 parliament seats in 2019 -- said he was proud of the south's long history of "harmonised" mixed-faith communities.

Many in India's southern states have backed populist parties rooted in their cultural and linguistic identity, boasting of social reform efforts aimed at tackling India's millennia-old caste hierarchy.

"Those places that have been able to maintain their cultural identity, language identity, their customs, their history... where people have the opportunity to grow... the BJP fares very poorly in those states," the 58-year-old Rajan said.

He was deeply critical of those he believes use Hinduism as "a political tool".

In the last polls, the BJP won just over a fifth of seats -- 29 out of 129 -- across the five southern states of Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Telangana.

In wooing the south, the BJP hopes to wrest the credentials of being a truly pan-India party from its already humbled rival, the opposition Congress Party.

But Tamil Nadu social activist Ramu Manivannan said Modi had his work cut out in the south, where literacy rates are higher than the national average.

"One of the most important reasons why it is a huge challenge for the BJP to come into the south... is because of social radicalisation," Manivannan said.

"When he (Modi) is in the north, he speaks the language of what you call religion... people do not verify what his performances are.

"If he comes and speaks about underdevelopment in Tamil Nadu, here people give him back figures."

- 'Fight for common issues' -

About a fifth of India's 1.4 billion live in the five southern states, and some fear if Modi wins, he could back a revision of electoral boundaries based on population.

That has worried some as it would likely mean a significant expansion of seats from northern states, reducing the south's overall parliamentary punch even further.

Each time Modi visits Tamil Nadu -- and he has made at least seven trips this year -- social media erupts with a hashtag battle between "Welcome Modi" versus "Go Back Modi".

The tax burden on the south, which some see as unfair, adds to the wariness.

Modi's image, bolstered by India's presidency of the G20 last year, has rested widely on his claims of steering the country into becoming one of the world's fastest-growing economies.

But with a 31 percent contribution to the country's GDP, India's economic success has been driven by southern states.

Global supply chains shifting from China such as Apple have moved to Tamil Nadu, which boasts the highest number of factories in the country by state.

But Rajan argues that economic disparities have added to tensions, saying people feel "squeezed" by heavy tax duties they see little return for.

"The more they constrain the engines of growth and revenue, the more the overall pie shakes," PTR said.

But some believe Modi could win big in the south, noting the party has reined in the religious rhetoric it utilises in northern heartlands.

"Now they (BJP) fight for common issues, just like the other parties," said 58-year-old Sivakumar, a book sales manager in Madurai, adding he believes people were warming to that shift.

"That change might be beneficial for the BJP," he said.

J.Simacek--TPP