Diplomatist Magazine Diplomatist August 2018 | Page 45

COVER STORY larger than life yet real, the demagogy that he envelops, the currency, the brand that he is, the confi dence, positive energy, readiness that characterises him is what is his USP that catapults him into the likes of Indira Gandhi. On this Independence Day too he came across as the man of the moment with his oratorial luxuries. As he said, we can take tough decisions because nation’s interest is fi rst for us, not the party’s, he set the electoral narrative. Knowing that he now does not have anything concrete to offer in terms of economy, Modi harped upon populist schemes. He pressed all the right buttons in his speech - poor, farmers, youth, middle class, soldiers, tax payers, corruption, middleman, power brokers. On women, who are his key vote bank, he struck a chord when he patted his back on women making it as Supreme Court Judges, women in the cabinet, women winning medals in sports and on women’s victory on triple talak. From scaling Mt Everest by tribal children to expedition to South Pole by Indian women. Modi presented himself as Santa Claus with announcements of ‘Ayushman Bharat’- the National Health Mission also popularly called as Modicare - the largest government funded healthcare programme which will be rolled out on September 5, 2018; and removal of AFSPA from North East. He issued a warning to spiraling atrocities on women and children saying rapes should be widely reported and rapists should be sent to gallows for their crimes to enforce the rule of law. Modi did not spare the opposition for UPA’s red tapism culture, power brokering, policy paralysis, no action on GST and India’s low global image. Modi’s Achilles’ Heel An analysis of his 4 years has seen his priorities change. This time around he was setting a tone for elections in MP, Chhattisgarh and Rajasthan to convey that he is a PM who believes in performance. Since 2014 this is the fi rst time that the narrative is against him whether it is the economy or social milieu of the country, be it lynching, sliding growth or jobs. So this time he made sure that he pushed hard the positive narrative. In whatever way Modi emphasizes the benefi ts that GST and Demonetization would bring for the country’s future and interests, the fact remains that they were the biggest fi ascos at the end of the common man. He did not talk of increasing oil prices, falling rupee, upward infl ation, low exports, bank crisis and lynching. There was no mention of Pakistan and cross border terrorism, NRC and farmers suicides – all of which are the underlying problems in the country presently. He avoided contentious & controversial issues; it was all about the ‘feel good’. Modi came in 2014 with a promise of making India a manufacturing hub which hasn’t shown tangible results. Niti Ayog which was replaced by Planning Commission which much of a hoopla hasn’t done much in terms of structural reforms. The export scene is pretty unsatisfactory too. Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Diplomatist • Vol 6 • Issue 8 • August 2018, Noida • 45