
Each new BJP public rally brings signs of a growing obsession with Bofors. United Front leaders, reacting defensively, are pushing the campaign agenda in the same direction.
People in Varanasi surely would have wondered whether the clock had stopped in 1989 on hearing the BJP8217;s prime minister-designate thunder on and on about India8217;s self-esteem being at stake because of the scandal. In Jalandhar, meanwhile, the Prime Minister was repeating his line about premature disclosures jeopardising the investigation. It is obviously no mystery why Bofors looms larger than any other scam under Congress regimes although some recent ones were more lucrative than the Rs 64-crore howitzer pay-offs. For the BJP it may make sense to concentrate on knocking out the sole ace in the Congress hand and to use Bofors rather than the unplayable foreigner8217; card. What is curious is the shape Bofors is taking of putting the Gujral government in the dock and leaving the Congress and its star campaigner with no particular need to engage in the dispute.
Single-issue election campaigns offer obvious advantages to political parties. At a time when alliances and defections have blurred the lines between them, one electrifying issue could help voters distinguish one from another. The Congress and BJP have in their time both benefitted by focussing single-mindedly on assassination or a Ram mandir. For the BJP this time around, there is a dilemma. On the one hand it needs to seize ground vacated by the Congress by broadening its appeal. On the other, projecting itself as all things to all people fuzzies its image. So, what does it do to define itself in opposition to the Congress? It aims its howitzer at I. K. Gujral because a direct attack on Sonia Gandhi could have the effect of provoking popular sympathy for her. As a political weapon, Bofors has endless possibilities.