May 12, 2014

SHORT ON RESOURCES, AAM AADMI PARTY VOLUNTEERS CANVASS FOR VOTES ON FOOT

[Unlike India’s traditional parties, whose vast financial resources allow them to support and house party workers, Mr. Nagar and the three students had traveled at their own expense in an effort to bolster Mr. Kejriwal’s chances in the constituency of Varanasi, where Mr. Modi remains the front-runner.]

By Vaibhav Vats
VARANASI, India – On Thursday morning, Rajesh Nagar, 45, a former employee of the Indian Navy, led a team of three students to campaign for Arvind Kejriwal, the leader of the Aam Aadmi Party. Mr. Kejriwal is opposing Narendra Modi, the prime minister candidate of the Bharatiya Janata Party, in a parliamentary race here that has captivated India.
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The three students – Tej Singh Chauhan, 23, Prashant Reddy, 21, and Khushboo Sinha, 22 – had arrived from the western state of Maharashtra, while Mr. Nagar had traveled from Noida, a suburb bordering Delhi, where he lived.
Unlike India’s traditional parties, whose vast financial resources allow them to support and house party workers, Mr. Nagar and the three students had traveled at their own expense in an effort to bolster Mr. Kejriwal’s chances in the constituency of Varanasi, where Mr. Modi remains the front-runner.
On Thursday morning, like thousands of volunteers, they reported at Mr. Kejriwal’s campaign headquarters, a modest house in the neighborhood of Shivaji Nagar. Here Mr. Nagar was grouped with the three students and told to campaign for Mr. Kejriwal in Lanka, a neighborhood bordering the city’s prestigious Banaras Hindu University.
Before leaving, the volunteer group collected campaign material from the party office. Mr. Reddy was handed two large brooms, which he was required to wave high above his head from time to time. (The broom is the Aam Aadmi Party’s electoral symbol.)
Mr. Chauhan carried a transparent plastic bag. It contained nearly 300 white caps, which have become widely identified with the party’s supporters; these were to be distributed while campaigning. Ms. Sinha carried several dozen copies of the party’s mouthpiece, a six-page newspaper called “Aap Ki Kranti,” which translates as “Your Revolution.”
Dwarfed in financial firepower by the Bharatiya Janata Party, which has put up large posters of Mr. Modi all over Varanasi, the Aam Aadmi Party has mobilized its network of volunteers nationwide to mount a challenge in the most old-fashioned of ways: by canvassing on foot and spreading their message by one-on-one interactions with voters.
Mr. Nagar began the door-to-door canvassing by leading the volunteer group to a tea stall in Lanka. Mr. Nagar spoke to Anil Kumar Pandey, 48, a local resident, who was sipping tea at the stall. Mr. Pandey turned out to be a fervent supporter of Mr. Modi. “Mr. Kejriwal has been fighting against corruption for all these years,” Mr. Pandey said. “Has corruption decreased?”
Several other supporters of Mr. Modi surrounded Mr. Nagar with arguments of their own, and momentarily Mr. Nagar seemed a man under siege. Charges and countercharges flew, and the conversation steadily grew more heated.
Mr. Reddy, his fellow volunteer, rescued Mr. Nagar from the melee. “Let’s not waste our time with people we cannot convert,” Mr. Reddy told Mr. Nagar.
The volunteer group had little luck elsewhere on the main avenue of Lanka, a commercial hub populated by shopkeepers who remain among the staunchest supporters of the Bharatiya Janata Party.
Mr. Nagar dictated a change of direction: “Let’s leave the main avenue and go into the small lanes.”
The volunteer group briefly spent some time distributing caps to passing auto-rickshaw drivers at a busy crossing, and then wove through the city’s lanes, calling on houses and engaging bystanders they encountered on the way.
It was a searing, hot afternoon, yet the volunteer group relentlessly marched on, halting only to buy a bottle of water or an aerated drink. After several hours of canvassing, two broad trends emerged: Mr. Nagar and his team were making most headway with undecided voters, and those towards the bottom of the socioeconomic scale.
Rahul Pandey, 21, a student at Kashi Vidyapeeth, said he was a big fan of Mr. Kejriwal, but had become dismayed after he resigned as Delhi’s chief minister. “If he couldn’t run Delhi for even two months, how will he run India?”
Mr. Nagar engaged Mr. Pandey in a long discussion. Mr. Nagar conceded mistakes had been made, but the intentions of the Aam Aadmi Party and Mr. Kejriwal remained clean. “Kejriwal is an honest man,” he said. “We have only just started. You have given so many chances to the Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party. You can give us one more chance at least.”
Some doubts lingered in his mind, Mr. Pandey said, but he would give Mr. Kejriwal another thought.
“That is all I want,” Mr. Nagar smiled. “Think some more, and make your own decision.”
Mr. Nagar and his team had to expend less energy on those at the bottom of the socioeconomic scale.
A rickshaw puller stopped in front of the volunteer group to demand the party’s white caps for himself and his family.
Mr. Nagar offered a party cap to Raju, 35, a vegetable vendor, who instead pulled out a cap from his pocket. “Don’t worry,” Mr. Raju said. “I am with you.”
Some of the most strident supporters of the Bharatiya Janata Party come from the upper and dominant castes, and those below them have the most to fear from a revival of upper-caste domination. Along with the Muslims, who have rallied behind Mr. Kejriwal, the support of lower-caste groups, who usually vote for the Samajwadi Party and the Bahujan Samaj Party, is critical if Mr. Kejriwal is to mount a formidable challenge to Mr. Modi.
Yet, even as Mr. Nagar and his team campaigned vigorously, they pleaded an inability to judge whether their results were bearing fruit. As the campaign entered its final days, and the stakes grew higher, Mr. Nagar and his team increasingly felt they were operating in a climate of aggression and intrigue, accentuated by frequent clashes between workers of the two parties in the previous weeks.
Now it seemed newer tactics were being employed to gain the upper hand. A gentleman, not known to any of the volunteer group, joined them toward the end of their canvassing. The gentleman claimed he was supporting Mr. Kejriwal and indicated his willingness to work with them.
However, as they campaigned, Mr. Nagar felt the gentleman often undermined his arguments and spoke against the party and Mr. Kejriwal.
“I don’t think he’s a real supporter,” Mr. Nagar told me. Mr. Nagar thought he was a Bharatiya Janata Party supporter who had been sent to sabotage their efforts.
A few minutes later, Mr. Nagar sternly told the gentleman to leave them alone.
Some time before this incident, Mr. Nagar had encountered a bystander wearing a Bharatiya Janata Party scarf around his neck. Mr. Nagar went to converse with him.
“Don’t worry, I am with Mr. Kejriwal,” the man told Mr. Nagar. “Some B.J.P. supporters asked me to wear this, and I didn’t want to upset them.”