Shiv 
                      Sena not to be affected by desertions: Uddhav
                       by Sameer Desai 
                      
                        Pune 
                      (Maharashtra): Uddhav Thackeray, the Executive President 
                      of the Shiv Sena, has said that the party will not be affected 
                      by the desertions of a few members. "As I have told before 
                      and even today I am telling, that whoever wants to go can 
                      go. When they will be defeated in the coming elections, 
                      then they will know and their careers will be over. Some 
                      MLAs may have gone, but the Shivsainiks will not go anywhere. 
                      They will be here," said Uddhav Thackeray. 
                       Uddhav 
                      was speaking to reporters in Pune, where he is attending 
                      various functions. Answering questions on his cousin Raj 
                      Thackeray, Uddhav said he was not aware of the latter's 
                      agenda and added that the Shiv Sena would react appropriately 
                      whenever it was revealed. "We will talk about that later. 
                      I do not know what will be his agenda. We will see it then," 
                      Uddhav said. On the controversy engulfing Yogu Guru Ramdev, 
                      Uddhav said that some conspiracy was being hatched against 
                      the latter. "What is wrong with what Ramdev baba says or 
                      does? He only practises yoga and gives some medicine. We 
                      simply cannot raise question on it. Who will tolerate it? 
                      What is the basis on which he has been charged?There is 
                      some conspiracy behind this. We are with him," said Uddhav 
                      Thackeray. 
                       Meanwhile, 
                      the Two MLAs, Kalidas Kolambkar and Shyam Sawant, from Naigaon 
                      in Mumbai and Srivardhan in Konkan, respectively, submitted 
                      their resignation to the Speaker of the Maharashtra State 
                      Assembly, Babasaheb Kupekar. They have since joined the 
                      Congress party formally. The escalating crisis in the Shiv 
                      Sena has attracted a fair amount of media attention over 
                      the last seven months. Bal Thackeray, one of the country's 
                      most vitriolic and high- profile leaders with a traditional 
                      base in our biggest and most cosmopolitan city, has been 
                      fighting to save his political edifice with his back literally 
                      to the wall. First, his one-time close associate Narayan 
                      Rane left the party and joined the Congress; he contested 
                      from his base Malvan and defeated the Shiv Sena candidate 
                      by a whopping margin of 63,372 votes. The Shiv Sena candidate 
                      lost his deposit in the election that had a high voter turnout 
                      of 71 per cent. He won though the senior Thackeray campaigned 
                      against him in spite of his poor health. Hardly had the 
                      shock of the defeat sunk in, when another crisis followed: 
                      Raj, the elder Thackeray's nephew, resigned from his party 
                      post. He subsequently quit the party last month. Rane had 
                      quit Shiv Sena and joined the Congress party in July last 
                      year after a prolonged dispute with Sena Executive President 
                      Uddhav Thackeray. He is now Revenue Minister in the Congress-led 
                      Democratic Front (DF) Government in Maharashtra. Rane s 
                      resignation was later followed by three party legislators, 
                      Shankar Kambli, Ganpat Kadam and Subash Bane, who also quit 
                      the party and are contesting the by-election to be held 
                      on January 21 as the Congress candidates. The MLAs who have 
                      defected with Rane so far are -- Vinayak Nimhan, Manikrao 
                      Kokate, Vijay Wadettiwar, Kalidas Kolambkar, Shyam Sawant, 
                      Prakash Bharsakle, Ganpat Kadam, Subhash Bane, Shankar Kambli, 
                      and Ashok Kale. Another MLA from Barshi Assembly segment 
                      of Solapur district, Rajendra Raut, too has joined the Rane 
                      camp, taking the total number of MLAs defecting to the Rane 
                      camp to 12. When Sena was founded in 1966, its agenda was 
                      to campaign for job reservation and better economic opportunities 
                      for Maharashtrians in Mumbai. 
                       The 
                      influx of immigrants in search of jobs and the resulting 
                      feeling of insecurity amongst the local population had set 
                      the right environment for a party like the Sena to thrive. 
                      It used strong-arm, aggressive methods to cut other national 
                      parties to size in Maharashtra. The textile mill crisis 
                      and the job losses made the Shiv Sena's rise to power easy. 
                      For all the 'political party' status that the Sena holds, 
                      it never really had an agenda beyond Mumbai. In a somewhat 
                      true fascist style, it targeted a series of communities 
                      (starting with the South Indians in the 1960s and 1970s) 
                      to justify its existence and to paint them as the cause 
                      of all the problems that Maharastrians faced in Mumbai ' 
                      be it jobs, opportunities or businesses. During later years, 
                      it added another angle to its attack, and took to a strident, 
                      fundamentalist Hinduism. When Balasaheb was thundering about 
                      'outsiders', it meant different things at different points 
                      in time. No serious attempts were made to build the party 
                      beyond its narrow, ideological straitjacket. Such was the 
                      fear Balasaheb caused that no administration ever took any 
                      action against him in spite of all the inflammatory statements 
                      he made during some the worst riots that Mumbai witnessed. 
                      
                        
                      Well, sadly for the Sena, time seemed to have come nearly 
                      a full circle. Its traditional support base has been slowly 
                      eroded away in these times of constant changes. Sharad Pawar 
                      s NCP has all but usurped the role of a party that claims 
                      to look after the interests of the state. The Sena's inability 
                      to hold on to Mumbai and its strongholds elsewhere in the 
                      state have sent a clear message that the final decline has 
                      set in. Today it doesn't even represent the famous Shivaji 
                      Park area which was the proverbial lion's den, from where 
                      the Balasaheb made his vitriolic speeches. The recent crisis 
                      has interesting origins. For several years Raj was considered 
                      the de facto inheritor of the throne, and for a while the 
                      son never showed much interest in taking up the mantle. 
                      However, things changed recently. In what was seen as a 
                      hurried move, the aging senior Thackeray anointed Uddhav 
                      as the executive president of the party. This has resulted 
                      in anger and resentment in sections of the party, not to 
                      mention the man who always thought he will be the king, 
                      Raj Thackeray. The first lesson is that parties have to 
                      evolve with time. What was the catchphrase of 1960s and 
                      70s cannot be used forever. Everything comes with an expiry 
                      date. Second, you can't run a successful political party 
                      unless you have some sort of inclusive politics. Equations 
                      based on local-versus-outsiders or one-caste-versus- another 
                      don't survive long. True, they have an appeal at some point, 
                      but people do get tired of the same rhetoric if it lasts 
                      for several years. Finally, one-man show parties should 
                      plan for a more democratic decision making within them. 
                      Otherwise they are destined to decline along with the leader. 
                      Unless the inheritor reinvents the party, not much of a 
                      future awaits for the much-feared Tigers of Mumbai. 
                     Back 
                      to Headlines 
                                       Go 
                      To Top