Politics
Home Minister and BJP leader Amit Shah in Karnataka ahead of the 10 May assembly election
Home Minister Amit Shah, in an interview with India Today, said the Congress party's electoral mathematics was lacking in Karnataka after they presented the possibility of banning Bajrang Dal in their election manifesto.
To the journalist's question of whether the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was invoking Bajrang Bali at the eleventh hour for success on the electoral battleground of Karnataka, Shah said, "In this case, it is the opposite. We have not remembered (Bajrang Bali), the Congress has."
"If the Congress in its manifesto had not raised this issue that is insulting of Bajrang Bali, then would it have been an issue?" Shah asked.
"They tried for vote consolidation via appeasement, but when one attempts vote consolidation in this way, the consolidation is not one-sided. Maybe this wasn't part of the Congress' (electoral) mathematics," Shah said, adding, "Now, the issue is out of their (Congress') hands."
In its manifesto, the Congress equated the banned Islamist extremist outfit Popular Front of India (PFI) with the Bajrang Dal, the youth wing of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS)-affiliated Vishwa Hindu Parishad, and stated that it will ban such organisations that promote "enmity or hatred, whether among majority or minority communities."
Since then, the issue has taken centre stage in Karnataka, with the BJP chanting the Hanuman Chalisa across the state in response.
K S Eshwarappa, a senior BJP leader in the state, even burnt a copy of the Congress' election manifesto on 4 May and attacked the party for its proposal to ban Bajrang Dal if it came to power in Karnataka.
Shah believes, as revealed to India Today, that the Karnataka electorate will vote decisively for the BJP and for Narendra Modi in the election.