
For the BJP, the more things change, the more they remain the same. What else to make of the many voices to have come out of its national executive? The executive has yielded the interesting spectacle of L.K. Advani speaking in a voice that would normally be expected from Atal Behari Vajpayee.
The Prime Minister in turn has opted to sound more like the party president than what is considered his more moderate self. Thus Advani would hark to the issues of tomorrow rather than yesterday, while Vajpayee declares that 8220;the government will not run the party, the party has to run the government8221;. The Prime Minister adds, for good measure, that coalition rule will probably be temporary and that the BJP ought to strive for one-party rule. The whole thing is topped off by a resolution attacking 8220;pseudo secularists8221; and party leaders saying they will not 8220;move away an inch8221; from the BJP8217;s real agenda, but will not make things difficult for a coalition government.
But this party, more than any other national political grouping, is also a singularly dynamic one. As much as it has reshaped Indian politics in recent years, it has also been changed by it. Advani8217;s speech could be viewed as an exhortation toparty workers that old-style extremism will no longer serve the party well. His urging the building of a Rashtra Mandir is a clever use of a familiar party idiom to press on the BJP a far more inclusive agenda. Advani and Vajpayee8217;s speeches also should disabuse those who believe that the two men represent the BJP8217;s hardline and moderate poles respectively. Whatever the differences in their personal styles and beliefs, these two men never have encouraged the understanding that somehow they stand apart within the BJP. This is pure interpretation, and it has a kernel of truth. But it is also exaggerated, and the BJP has let this pass because it suits the party to alternately project a tough and an accommodating image of itself.
Vajpayee and Advani8217;s speeches this time round could be a message that they are not to be seen as contending partners in a fractious government. The BJP executive8217;s proceedings certainly highlight the difficulties that a party with an extreme ideology faces in capturing the imaginationof large numbers. But they need not be feared as an atavistic resurgence of pre-1992 form.