
The RSS, according to a report in this paper, has decided on a 8220;phased withdrawal8221; from the BJP8217;s day-to-day affairs, it will 8220;micro-manage8221; the party no more. The BJP is to be given back to the BJP. Whatever the reason for the RSS8217;s decision 8212; be it the pragmatic realisation that uncontrolled intimacies and blurring lines between political party and 8220;cultural organisation8221; were helping neither, or belated acknowledgement of the autonomy of a political party 8212; the prospect of India8217;s main opposition party emerging from the shadow of an unaccountable organisation is good news. For the BJP, however, it may still not be good enough.
The terms of the withdrawal are likely to be controversial and contested. A BJP that has lost a sense of self and an RSS that has become accustomed to bending the BJP to its will 8212; can the two extricate themselves from the tangled mess and tell the tale? Will the RSS hand back the reins, as it has promised it will, to the BJP8217;s Big Two? Not so long ago it had urged a generation shift, declaring Vajpayee and Advani to be too old to lead. But even if it were possible to execute such a transfer of power, many of the BJP8217;s problems remain. Can Vajpayee and Advani put the genie of factionalism back into the bottle? Can they revive the party8217;s somnolent second rung, or invent a new one? Too many of the BJP8217;s state units are convulsed by bitter infighting. Be it Rajasthan, UP, Madhya Pradesh or most notably Gujarat, there is no sense of common purpose in the party any more. The fact also is that none of the once-celebrated second generation leaders in the BJP has shown any signs of being able to rally the whole party behind him or her.