The Hindu Morning Digest, March 12, 2024

NSA Ajit Doval meeting Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu in Israel. Photo: X/@IsraeliPM

India test-fires Agni-V ballistic missile with multiple warhead technology under Mission Divyastra

In a major technological breakthrough and building in redundancy into the country’s nuclear weapons programme, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday announced the successful test firing of Agni-V ballistic missile with Multiple Independently Targetable Re-entry Vehicle (MIRV) technology by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) under Mission Divyastra. The MIRV technology means a single missile can carry multiple warheads. The maiden flight test of Agni-V, India’s longest range ballistic missile with a “range of more than 5000 kms” was conducted in April 2012 and has since been tested multiple times.

NSA Doval meets Israeli PM Netanyahu to discuss war in Gaza, humanitarian assistance

National Security Adviser Ajit Doval met Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Israel to discuss regional developments and the urgent need to address the issue of humanitarian assistance in Gaza. Mr. Doval also met his Israeli counterpart Tzakhi Hanegbi, who was also present during the meeting with Mr. Netanyahu.

Mallikarjun Kharge cautions BJP that any bid to change or rewrite Constitution will cause an upheaval

Stepping up his attack on BJP MP Anantkumar Hegde’s statement that the BJP needed more than 400 Lok Sabha seats to change the Constitution, Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge on March 11 asked Prime Minister Narendra Modi to break his “silence” on the issue and dared him to expel Mr. Hegde. The party will start a nationwide campaign from Tuesday to highlight the BJP’s bias against secularism and social justice to the poor and oppressed classes, as enshrined in the Constitution.

Churu MP Rahul Kaswan resigns from BJP, joins Congress

Churu MP Rahul Kaswan on March 11 resigned from the BJP and joined the Congress. He also resigned as a member of the Lok Sabha. “Due to political reasons, at this very moment today, I am resigning from the primary membership of the Bharatiya Janata Party and from the post of Member of Parliament,” Mr. Kaswan posted on X.

Trinamool is sure ‘outsider’ Yusuf Pathan will unseat Adhir; Cong. and Left stunned by choice

After the sustained battle between Congress State president Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury and top leadership of the Trinamool Congress, the party stunned everyone by placing all bets on cricketer Yusuf Pathan to defeat Mr. Chowdhury in the Baharampur Lok Sabha constituency, which he has won five straight times since 1999. The Trinamool has never won the seat, which in the last seven decades has been dominated by either the Congress or the Revolutionary Socialist Party.

Defence Ministry signs ₹200 crore contract for anti-drone systems under iDEX initiative

The Ministry of Defence has signed a ₹200 crore contract for anti-drone systems for the Indian Army and Indian Air Force (IAF) with Big Bang Boom Solutions Private Limited (BBBS). This is the largest contract signed by the MoD under the Innovations for Defence Excellence (iDEX) initiative, according to the company.

In Telangana, an eagle squad to pull down rogue drones

Close to three years of painstaking efforts and training have fructified for the Telangana Police after the eagles they had trained successfully pulled down drones in a demonstration held before top police officials recently. Planned to be used for VVIP visits and public meetings, these eagles are capable of identifying drones and pulling them down before they can inflict any possible damage. Eagle squad is part of the Internal Security Wing (ISW), the highly specialised police force to oversee VVIP security in Telangana.

SC to hear plea of six disqualified Himachal MLAs against their disqualification on March 12 

The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear on March 12 a plea by six rebel Congress MLAs, who had cross-voted in the recent Rajya Sabha polls in Himachal Pradesh, against their disqualification. The Speaker of Himachal Pradesh Assembly, Kuldeep Singh Pathania, had disqualified the six on the Congress’ plea for “defying” the party whip that required them to be present in the House and vote for the budget.

India ‘one of the worst autocratisers’: V-Dem report on democracy

India, which was downgraded to the status of an “electoral autocracy” in 2018, has declined even further on multiple metrics to emerge as “one of the worst autocratizers”, according to the ‘Democracy Report 2024’ released by the Gothenburg-based V-Dem Institute that tracks democratic freedoms worldwide. Noting that India’s “autocratisation process has been well documented, including gradual but substantial deterioration of freedom of expression, compromising independence of the media, crackdowns on social media, harassments of journalists critical of the government, as well as attacks on civil society,” the report detailed how the “anti-pluralist” BJP government has “used laws on sedition, defamation, and counterterrorism to silence critics”.

Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, number of other countries want to start rupee trade with India: Piyush Goyal

Many developed and developing countries including Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and nations of the Gulf region are keen to start trade in rupee with India as it would help cut transaction costs for businesses, Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal has said. He expressed confidence that the development is going to be a “very game-changing” dimension to India’s international trade.

Oscars 2024: ‘Oppenheimer’ wins Best Picture in epic landslide

“Oppenheimer,” a solemn three-hour biopic that became an unlikely billion-dollar box-office sensation, was crowned best picture at a 96th Academy Awards that doubled as a coronation for Christopher Nolan. The most closely watched contest of the Academy Awards went to Emma Stone, who won best best actress for her performance as Bella Baxter in “Poor Things.” In what was seen as the night’s most nail-biting category, Stone won over Lily Gladstone of “Killers of the Flower Moon.”

Palestinians in Gaza begin Ramadan with hunger worsening and no end in sight to the Israel-Hamas war

Palestinians began fasting for Ramzan on Monday as the Muslim holy month arrived with ceasefire talks at a standstill, hunger worsening across the Gaza Strip and no end in sight to the five-month-old war between Israel and Hamas. The U.S., Qatar and Egypt had hoped to broker a cease-fire ahead of the normally joyous month of dawn-to-dusk fasting that would include the release of dozens of Israeli hostages and Palestinian prisoners, and the entry of a large amount of humanitarian aid, but the talks stalled last week.

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Opinion: Why Finding Strong Karnataka Candidates Is Congress’ 1st Challenge

Electoral politics is, unfortunately, largely a cost-benefit analysis for the contestants, especially in a state like Karnataka with India’s richest legislators and parliamentarians, most of whom have huge business interests. There is a definite financial investment to be made to win an election and the amount is in crores or tens of crores, depending on the constituency, candidate, and the state. Candidates willing to make that financial investment keep the returns in mind.

In Karnataka, the Congress’s emphatic victory in the 2023 assembly polls means the benefits of being in state politics outweigh the uncertain prospects in New Delhi.

Congress leaders candidly admit that there is a lukewarm response from some Karnataka cabinet ministers, and even some of the MLAs, for the call to contest the Lok Sabha polls. In fact, Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, a few weeks ago, had publicly stated that his ministers must contest, if the party asks them to.

While the reluctance is palpable even in Telangana – the other southern state where the Congress wrested power – it’s more pronounced in Karnataka where, since 2004, the BJP has won not less than 17 of 28 parliamentary seats. The ruling party’s two-decade Karnataka juggernaut hit a peak in 2019 with a near total sweep – 25 of the 28 seats.

Even Mallikarjun Kharge, the present Congress president, lost his traditional stronghold of Gulbarga to the BJP in 2019. Other strong parliamentary faces like KH Muniyappa, a seven-time MP from Kolar, lost in 2019 and subsequently shifted to state politics, winning the assembly election in 2023. He now seems settled into a comfortable ministership in the Siddaramiah cabinet.

These are Congress veterans who held out till 2019, but the real problem is that over the last two decades, the party has failed to nurture strong young parliamentary aspirants in most constituencies.   

For instance, in the three urban seats of Bengaluru (North, South and Central), the Congress has tried various candidates since 2004, including Nandan Nilekani in Bengaluru South in 2014, but has failed to breach the BJP bastion. There  are 17 such seats in the state where the BJP has had consecutive wins over the last two decades and finding candidates, young or old, who can put up a genuine fight, is a challenge .

This is exactly why the Congress wants serving state ministers to enter the poll contest. The only way it can ensure that a candidate puts up a strong fight is if it becomes a prestige battle. For instance, state Congress chief DK Shivakumar’s brother DK Suresh is the lone Congress MP who survived the BJP sweep in 2019, and has consistently held the Bengaluru Rural seat.

Congress leaders use this as an example to show that if one puts up a genuine fight, it is possible to wrest a seat even in a sweep election. But, in the same breath, they assert that there are very few such candidates.

In Mandya, after the death of actor-politician Ambareesh, his widow Sumalatha contested as an independent backed by the BJP because the Congress, in an alliance with the JD(S), gave the seat to its ally in 2019. Since then, Sumalatha has firmly stayed with the BJP. The Congress is hoping to get state cabinet minister HC Mahadevappa to contest the polls from here. He is clearly reluctant.

Making powerful state leaders dive into the contest is difficult. Most believe that it could weaken their stature if they lose a contest and, more importantly, they do not want to spend their resources. “What if I win? will I give up ministership and shift to Parliament?” asked a senior state cabinet minister, requesting anonymity. It reflects the thinking process.

At the same time, given that Karnataka and Telangana were the only two seat winning states for the BJP from among the five southern states in 2019, a Congress challenge here is essential if it has to contain the BJP’s overall numbers.

A senior congress leader from Telangana, who was once a parliamentarian and later contested and lost the 2023 assembly polls, shared that it’s too expensive to contest a parliamentary poll. It was better to look for entry into the legislative council and be active in state politics, he said, again requesting anonymity.  

This would be different had there been a realistic chance of making it to power at the Centre. The reality is that the Congress candidate is contesting with little hope of a change in Delhi. Which is why party strategists feel that prestige battles or one that revolves around political rivalry/survival, backed by strong money power or the caste vote could be crucial motivation and should be factored in choosing “winnable” candidates in states like Karnataka and Telangana. Even in Tamil Nadu, the dominant Congress ally, the DMK, is keen to have a say in the choice of candidates by the Congress. Which is why they are yet to firm up a seat-sharing arrangement. In fact, 2019 was a sweep for the DMK-Congress alliance, which won 38 of the 39 seats in Tamil Nadu. The lone defeat was the then Tamil Nadu Congress president EVKS Elangovan, who lost to AIADMK leader O Paneerselvam’s son P Raveendranath.

It’s a lesson that if a strong candidate like DK Suresh can withstand a BJP onslaught in Karnataka, a candidate who doesn’t work on the ground can lose even if there’s a sweep election for the party.    

As far as Karnataka is concerned, the BJP seems all focussed on an aggressive Hindutva push. The issues that it has picked up in the last few days – a Temple Bill, alleged pro-Pakistan slogans and a scathing political attack on the state government after the Rameshwaram cafe blast – clearly reveal the party’s strategy. Hindutva and Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s persona are its core selling points this time and there is lesser emphasis on Karnataka’s famous caste and sect arithmetic.

The BJP’s alliance with the JD(S) seems extraordinarily strong on paper and the vote shares of the two parties put together, since 2004, is comfortably above the 50 percent mark. This is an enormous reality for the Congress, which has been traditionally weaker in any  parliamentary face off against the BJP in the state.

The state leadership is keen to put up a fight and it is a prestige battle for the Congress president. It’s also a battle that could determine the road ahead for the state government, with conflicting power centres. In fact, Siddarmiah’s son Dr. Yatheendra publicly linked his father’s continuance as Chief Minister to the party’s showing in the parliamentary polls.

The objective and intent are there, the only question is whether they have candidates on the ground to take the fight to the BJP.

(TM Veeraraghav is Executive Editor, NDTV)

Disclaimer: These are the personal opinions of the author.

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