Bharatiya Janata Party, Jharkhand Explained

Party Logo:File:Bharatiya Janata Party logo.svg
Abbreviation:BJP
President:Babulal Marandi
General Secretary:Dharmpal Singh
Headquarters:Dr. Syama Prasad Mookerji Bhawan M-7, Harmu Housing Colony, Ranchi - 834 002 Jharkhand
Colours: Saffron
State Seats Name:Jharkhand Legislative Assembly
Chairman:Amar Kumar Bauri
(Leader of the Opposition)
Eci:National Party

Bharatiya Janata Party, Jharkhand, or simply BJP Jharkhand, is the affiliate of Bharatiya Janata Party for the state of Jharkhand. Its head office is situated at the M-7, Harmu Housing Colony, Ranchi. Deepak Prakash was appointed as the State President of the Jharkhand unit on 25 February 2020.

History

At the time of its formation in 1980, the Bharatiya Janata Party had limited success in what would become Jharkhand. In the 1985 Bihar legislative assembly election, the BJP won 16 seats of which 14 were in regions that would become part of Jharkhand. In 1989, the BJP won five seats in the region. The BJP had long supported the creation of a state out of the southern part of Bihar they called 'Vananchal', in keeping with their naming of the Adivasis as 'Vanvasis'.[1] The BJP's rhetoric at this time with regards to the Jharkhand movement largely claimed that the mainstream leaders, which they saw as westernized 'elites', were using the Jharkhand movement to enrich themselves. The BJP sought to persuade non-Christian tribals by claiming they were part of the 'Hindu nation', while demonizing Christian tribals as westernised. Much of this groundwork was prepared by sister organisations like the Vanavasi Kalyan Ashram, which sought to prevent Christian conversions among Adivasis and Hinduize them.[2]

In 1989, due to their promise for Vananchal, they obtained 5 out of the 14 seats in the Lok Sabha, with a 30% voteshare. In 1990, the BJP gained 20 seats with a voteshare of at least 20% in the Jharkhand region, which stayed with the party throughout the 1990s.[3] In 1991, the BJP officially added a promise to set up a commission to study the division of larger states, including Bihar, into smaller states and gained five seats. The electorate in Jharkhand were favouring national parties who could form a government at the Centre and grant them statehood, and the BJP was the most influential party advocating strongly for statehood. In 1996 and 1998, the BJP obtained 12 seats in the Jharkhand region, and 11 in 1999, squeezing out other regional parties like JMM and AJSU who were also advocating for statehood. The BJP combined its small states agenda with a patronization of tribal institutions and nomination of tribal candidates for the elections. In 2000, the BJP gained the most seats in the Jharkhand region during Bihar assembly elections with 39.5% of the vote, and when the BJP at the centre formed the three new states, the BJP formed the first government. Babulal Marandi was chosen as the first Chief Minister.

Electoral history

Legislative Assembly election

YearSeats won+/-Voteshare (%) +/- (%)Outcome
2005 3023.57% 23.57Coalition Government
2009 1220.18% 3.39%Coalition Government
2014 1931.26% 11.08%Government
2019 1233.37% 2.11%Opposition

Lok Sabha election

YearSeats won+/-Outcome
2004Opposition
2009 8
2014 3Government
2019 1
2024 3

Leadership

Chief Minister

NoPortaritNameConstituencyTermAssembly
1Babulal MarandiRamgarh15 November 200018 March 20031st
2Arjun MundaKharsawan18 March 20032 March 2005
12 March 200519 September 20062nd
11 September 201018 January 20133rd
3Raghubar DasJamshedpur East28 December 201429 December 20194th

Leader of the Opposition

NoPortaritNameTermAssembly
1Arjun Munda4 December 200629 May 20092nd
19 July 201323 December 20143rd
2Amar Kumar Bauri16 October 2023Incumbent5th

President

NameTerm
[4] Abhay Kant Prasad02-Sep-200118-Jul-2004
[5] Raghubar Das18-Jul-200413-May-2005
[6] Yadunath Pandey13-May-2005
7[7] Dineshanand Goswami25-Sep-201010-Mar-2013
8[8] Ravindra Kumar Ray10-Mar-201317-May-2016
9[9] Tala Marandi17-May-201624-Aug-2016
10[10] Laxman Giluwa24-Aug-201625-Feb-2020
11[11] Deepak Prakash25-Feb-20204-Jul-2023
12Babulal Marandi4-Jul-2023present

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: The politics of belonging in India: becoming Adivasi . 2011 . Routledge . 978-0-415-60082-8 . Rycroft . Daniel J. . Routledge contemporary South Asia series . London ; New York . Politics, development and identity: Jharkhand, 1991–2009 . 666573628 . Dasgupta . Sangeeta.
  2. Hocking . Russell . 1994 . The potential for BJP expansion: Ideology, politics, and regional appeal — the lessons of Jharkhand . South Asia: Journal of South Asian Studies . en . 17 . sup001 . 157–168 . 10.1080/00856409408723222 . 0085-6401.
  3. Book: Electoral dynamics in the states of India . 2022 . Routledge . 978-1-003-15997-1 . Shastri . Sandeep . London New York . Jharkhand: The ascendance of the BJP as a dominant party . Kumar . Ashutosh . Sisodia . Yatindra Singh.
  4. News: 2003-08-05 . Send-off for BJP chief . Telegraph India.
  5. News: 2004-07-18 . Boss salve on BJP fire . Telegraph India.
  6. Web site: Reins shift in reign of chaos . www.telegraphindia.com .
  7. Web site: Goswami is state BJP chief . www.telegraphindia.com .
  8. News: Ravindra Rai, K V Singh Deo to head BJP in Jharkhand, Odisha . Business Standard India .
  9. News: Press Trust of India. 2016-05-17. BJP appoints Tala Marandi its Jharkhand unit president. Business Standard India. 2022-01-23.
  10. Web site: 2016-08-27. Jharkhand: New BJP chief Laxman Gilua takes over from Tala Marandi, promises to work on tribal issues. 2022-01-23. The Indian Express. en.
  11. Web site: Deepak Prakash appointed BJP Jharkhand chief . 2022-01-23 . The New Indian Express.