In the BBMP polls, Modi is not a factor: Prakash Belawadi

Actor and activist Prakash Belawadi responds to some questions related to the upcoming BBMP elections.

 


Prakash Belawadi

Actor and activist Prakash Belawadi is also a member of BPAC – Bangalore Political Action Committee. He had been a candidate in the last BBMP elections in 2010. This time he has helped moderate many ward level debates for Namma Bengaluru Foundation. He responds to some questions related to the upcoming BBMP elections. 

During the national elections, you supported BJP and Modi. Given the performance of the last 5 years of BBMP, ruled by the BJP, would you still do the same?

No way. Yes, I voted for BJP because of Modi in the Lok Sabha polls. In the BBMP polls, Modi is not a factor.

Are you supporting Loksatta this time? Reasons?

I believe we must find an alternative to the corrupt big parties. There is really no difference between them in their culture of politics, which is based on patronage, venality and sycophancy. I’m not secular or socialist, which at least two of them are. Or, in truth, I don’t really understand these words. I don’t even understand ‘Hindutva’. So, a new party with a new political culture.

What are your insights, after conducting so many ward-level debates for Namma Bengaluru Foundation? Do you think the candidates know their voters well? And vice-versa?

I can only tell you the obvious, that people in the outskirts are eager for change and you can see the quickening, the awareness that they have been denied their share in the prosperity that this city enjoys compared to other towns and cities. In the city centre, voters are not that fired up. They are cynical about BBMP anyway and these polls, especially. They don’t believe the council will last long given the plans to divide the municipal administration. In some wards, the voters seem to know the candidate well, especially in negative terms! I think the reservation and rotation system makes it hard for voters to keep a connect with their corporators. But I must say we were pleasantly surprised to find many candidates who understood their ward issues and were able to articulate them, with practical solutions.

What do you root for in this election?

Administrative reforms:

1) Freeing the municipal administration from state government control with an effective mayoral system;

2) Rational devolution of funds;

3) Real decentralisation down to the ward level, with widely represented ward committees that meet regularly to prioritise works at the local level, with the involvement of experts and transparent audits of both implementation and costs incurred;

4) A Vision for Bengaluru, with a plan to integrate the planning and functioning of parastatals finalised with the widest possible consultation;

5) A panel of experts to design projects, rather than politicians and bureaucrats coming up with knee-jerk solutions; and

6) An ombudsman system to address public suggestions and complaints.

BJP workers in one ward asked for support, saying as Venkaiah Naidu is the Urban Minister, he will help with development in our ward. Congress  claims roads improvement happen thanks to CM’s Nagarotthana scheme. You know the challenges with patronage mindset. Can ward elections be conducted in a non-partisan way with candidates asking for votes on their own merit?

Modi announcing special packages for Bihar, Naidu promising influence with Modi, Siddaramaiah seeking votes in the name of the state government and due to his control of fund release… all these are, like you say, part of the patronage mindset. I’ve been suggesting at ward debates that the voters of a ward, with their local experts and elders, should draw up a ward plan, on a timeline of five years, and ask the candidates to implement them, regardless of who wins. Or find the candidate best equipped to deliver on the plan. I think that’s the way to go.

Related Articles

I want a non-corrupt BBMP, hence I support BJP: MP Rajeev Chandrasekhar
No party has performed well in the last few years: Mohandas Pai
BBMP election 2015 – full list of candidates
Less educated, but stinking rich: Will this be the new set of BBMP corporators?
BBMP Elections 2015: Special coverage by Citizen Matters

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Similar Story

City Buzz: What ails the Data Protection Act? | Bengaluru’s bike taxi dilemma

All you need to know about the ongoing debate concerning the DPDP Act; and the uncertain future of bike taxis in Bengaluru.

DPDP Act sparks privacy vs transparency debate The Digital Personal Data Protection Rules (DPDP Bill 2025), drawn up by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY), are designed to facilitate the implementation of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act (DPDP Act), 2023. The DPDP Act, 2023, lays out guidelines for the collection, processing, and protection of personal data while ensuring individuals' privacy rights. The Act was passed in the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha in August 2023 and subsequently received assent from the President of India. However, the DPDP Bill has stoked a controversy over its ruling on the…

Similar Story

Give the poor homes or allow them to build? Ambedkar Nagar may hold the answer

The residents of the resettlement site in Chennai have made gradual upgrades to their homes, but are yet to get formal land titles from the government.

Across Indian cities, resettlement policies have often failed to provide long-term solutions for displaced communities, leaving them with insecure tenure, inadequate infrastructure, and limited growth opportunities. These challenges become even more apparent in resettlement schemes such as Chennai's Perumbakkam, where displaced communities were relocated into government-built apartments nearly 30 kilometres away. Antony, one of the first allottees of a plot in Chennai's Ambedkar Nagar, compares plots and apartments. He explains that having land allows gradual construction and improvements. "This is best. Here, with land, we can construct over time. There (in Perumbakkam), they cannot. There, even if they have money,…