Politics
Telangana Chief Minister K Chandrashekhar Rao. (Arijit Sen/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)
Campaigning for the Telangana assembly elections has ended. Now only the voting remains. To understand what the ballot box might say, and why, we must merge both the electoral and census data.
A bare-bones reading of past assembly election results would rightly lead to the inference that K Chandrashekhar Rao (KCR) and his BRS rose to gain power by first attracting votes from the very TDP of N Chandrababu Naidu whom he allied with in 2009, and then from the Congress after Jaganmohan Reddy had a fractious falling out with that party.
But that political history of Telangana is a simplistic one, because, in fact, that state’s politics is a lot more nuanced many perceive. And that in turn is a function of the state’s demographic distributions.
Muslims constitute only 13 per cent of the population, but they are concentrated in the city of Hyderabad, and four north-western districts – Medak, Nizamabad, Ranga Reddy, and Adilabad. For ages, they were stout Congress supporters in the districts, until the majority shifted allegiance first to the TDP, and then, after the TDP aligned with the BJP, to the BRS.
This is where the BJP has started performing moderately better in the past decade (Secunderabad is an urban outlier which became a BJP bastion decades ago).
Scheduled castes form 15 per cent of the population, and are almost evenly distributed across Telangana. Anecdotal evidence indicates that some segments have converted to Christianity, but quantification is difficult, since nondisclosure permits people to avail of reservations and government schemes.
Scheduled tribes make up 9 per cent, and are concentrated in two areas – Adilabad in the north, and in the eastern districts of Khammam, Warangal and Nalgonda. Their support has traditionally been more for the Congress. It is a segment which the BJP has yet to make inroads into, and one of the reasons could be covert conversions (which is pretty much the unwritten form in neighbouring Andhra Pradesh). So, we see that about 40 per cent of the electorate is susceptible to identity politics.
Surveys indicate that over a third of the population belong to the backward classes (OBC). But, no one OBC community is numerically dominant. Instead, it is subdivided into over a dozen groups, each of whom range from between 1-6 per cent of the total population.
A number of prominent leaders and Chief Ministers belong to the FC category. KCR is a Velama. NT Rama Rao and N Chandrababu Naidu are Kammas. Chiranjeevi and Pawan Kalyan are Kapus. G Kishen Reddy of the BJP, who represents Secunderabad constituency in parliament, is also an FC.
This is what makes Telangana politics interesting and unique. For example, although NT Rama Rao earned the ire of the OBC community when he abolished the Patel-Patwari land tenurial system in the early 1980s, he was able to weather that storm by allying with communities from the other 40 per cent. So too, Chandrababu Naidu, who had a good thing going until the Muslim vote deserted him.
Only an astute politician can stitch together a successful, durable coalition of such diverse communities, across a state with such varied demographics, under a single party’s banner.
This is the mountain the BJP has to climb. They did very well in northwest Telangana in the 2019 general elections, polling 20 per cent. That is up 13 per cent from what they got in the assembly elections of December 2018. The won four seats, and, in a major upset, KCR’s daughter K Kavitha lost poorly to Arvind Dharmapuri of the BJP in Nizamabad.
KCR’s response by way of damage control was to whittle away at the Congress, and reduce the latter’s position to tatters in the legislature. A table below says it all: