As the campaigning ended on Easter Sunday for all 20 Lok Sabha seats in Kerala, the big question is whether the BJP will be able to get its first ever MP from the state.
Intermittent summer showers did nothing to cool the campaigning fervour of the three main contestants – the Congress-led United Democratic Front (UDF) working to keep its 12 seats intact, the CPM-led Left Democratic Front (LDF) hoping to not lose any of its current eight seats, and the newly-energised BJP which is hoping to cash in on the sentiments raised over Supreme Court’s Sabarimala temple verdict.
The Thiruvananthapuram contest is the bellwether fight in Kerala. Incumbent Congress MP Dr Shashi Tharoor, 63, is up against a confident BJP nominee Kummanam Rajasekaran, 67. Kummanam’s campaign is making this a fight to “protect faith” and secure the country against “anti-nationals”. Meanwhile, LDF’s C Divakaran is fighting to regain CPM’s lost pride, having come a poor third in the 2014 Lok Sabha poll.
Since 1980, UDF has won this seat eight times and the LDF thrice. But the phenomenal growth in BJP’s support base here since 2009 saw the CPM conceding ground to senior BJP leader O Rajagopal. Rajagopal had lost in the 2014 Lok Sabha election, but had come second with a large vote share. He also got elected as the first and only BJP MLA in Kerala in the 2016 assembly election.
When Shashi Tharoor made his entry to the poll scene in 2009, he capitalised on his aura of a being global citizen and internationally-renowned writer, his suave charm and proven administrative acumen. Besides being a polyglot, his easy eloquence in English, handsome looks and confident body language found voters warming to him.
Even his heavily-accented Malayalam was accepted, as voters saw him as a globe-trotting former Under-Secretary-General in the United Nations, hobnobbing with world leaders like George Bush, Barack Obama and Tony Blair.
After coasting to a comfortable victory in 2009, he had to fight hard in 2014 to get a second innings despite his creditable performance in parliament. His opponent, BJP veteran O Rajagopal, had polled a surprising 2.82 lakh votes then.
It was only the hardcore support of Thiruvananthapuram’s fisherfolk, mostly from the Latin Catholic community, that enabled Tharoor to scrape through with a slender margin of 15,476 votes. Even this was possible only because of the cross-voting in his favour by CPM workers.
Five summers later, the political scene in the state and its capital has witnessed a sea change. Since the agitation to protect faith was launched in the wake of the Supreme court verdict on women’s entry into Sabarimala, the political mercury has soared, singeing every party and candidate.
Even before Kummanam’s arrival in Thiruvananthapuram, RSS and BJP workers had put in systematic groundwork to build support for him. In 2014, the BJP had topped in four of the seven assembly segments in the constituency, particularly the urban areas of Thiruvananthpuram, Vattiyoorkkavu, Kazhakoottam and Nemom, while Tharoor swept the coastal belt of Kovalam, Parassala and Neyyattinkara.
Tharoor is confident his minority vote bank is still intact and that they will vote en bloc to oust the Narendra Modi government. “It is a fight to ensure that Modi government is voted out,” he reminded his supporters.
Anticipating a repeat of cross-voting by LDF in favour of Tharoor, BJP workers are leaving no stone unturned to ensure that their support base, the Nair vote bank, remains intact. “BJP and RSS workers have come eight times to my house to canvas votes for Kummanam,” said Vibhushooshanan Nair, a voter in West Fort, Thiruvananthapuram. Nair had voted for Shashi Tharoor twice before. “Everybody knows Kummanam as a simple, down-to-earth, sanyasin-like human being in the attire of a political leader. He commands respect and love.”
Preetha, a native of Vattiyoorkkavu and a government servant, said she was confused. “I have voted twice for Tharoor and still have great respect for him. But when it comes to faith, it was the BJP and RSS workers who came forward to endure hardships for the devotees,” said Preetha.
Not surprisingly, Kummanam’s campaign harps on faith, development and security. “Faith is integral to our life,” said Kummanam at an election meeting on the outskirts of the city in the Vattiyoorkavu assembly segment. “Believers here suffered a lot at the hands of the Pinarayi Vijayan government”. He also met the CSI Bishop to canvas support from the Nadars, who number around 15 lakh according a 2016 study by the Centre for Development Studies.
Kummanam, the BJP State President from 2015 to 2018, had resigned as the Governor of Mizoram to contest this election. He has been a full-time Sangh Parivar worker since 1987, and was instrumental in spearheading Kerala’s Vishva Hindu Parishad and Kshetra Samrakshana Samiti.
Few give LDF candidate C Divakaran, 76, much of a chance, despite his familiarity with workers and middle-class voters. Considered by locals as a “son of the soil”, Divakaran, a former state minister and three-time MLA from Nedumangad assembly segment, was one of three CPM leaders who faced disciplinary action in the wake of allegations of ‘seat trade’ in 2014.
He is nevertheless putting up a brave face, and parrots the party line. “Voters here know me well. I am sure of victory,” said Divakaran. However, Divakaran knows better than most, that the real fight is between Tharoor and Kummanam.
[flexiblemap src=”http://data.opencity.in/Data/Kerala-Parliament-Constituency-Trivandrum-Map-V-1.kml” width=”100%” height=”400px” ]
Note – Map for representation purpose | Source – http://datameet.org
Full list of candidates
Candidate Name (click on candidate’s name to access affidavit) | Party | Assets | Liabilities |
KIRAN KUMAR S K
36, 12th std, Honorary Secretary at Co-op Society |
Bahujan Samaj Party | Rs 19.94 lakh | Rs 5.95 lakh |
KUMMANAM RAJASEKHARAN
66, B Sc (Botany), Former Governor of Mizoram |
Bharatiya Janata Party | Rs 11.06 lakh | Nil |
C DIVAKARAN
76, Graduate; Politician, MLA |
Communist Party of India | Rs 90.1 lakh | Rs 13.18 lakh |
DR SHASHI THAROOR
63, Doctorate; Social worker, author, speaker |
Indian National Congress | Rs 35 crore | Nil |
PANDALAM KERALAVARMARAJA
77, Graduate, Social Worker |
Pravasi Nivasi Party | Rs 63 lakh | Nil |
S MINI (F)
44, 12th Pass, Political activist |
Socialist Unity Centre of India (Communist) | Rs 1.25 lakh | Nil |
CHRISTOPHER SHAJU PALIYODE
43, 12th std; Evangelist, social worker |
Independent | Rs 18.25 lakh | Rs 3.3 lakh |
GOPAKUMAR OORUPOIKA
44, 10th std, Mason |
Independent | Rs 3.10 lakh | Rs 10,500 |
JAIN WILSON
59, Graduate, Social worker |
Independent | Rs 1 lakh | Nil |
JOHNY THAMPY
54, 12th std, Technician |
Independent | Rs 30,000 | Nil |
B DEVADATHAN
70, 10th std, KSRTC Pensioner |
Independent | Rs 75,000 | Nil |
BINU D
42, 10th std; Coolie, social worker |
Independent | Rs 1 lakh | Nil |
MITHRA KUMAR G
58, Postgraduate, Pensioner |
Independent | Rs 27.52 lakh | Nil |
VISHNU S AMBADI
34, Graduate, Business – online media (Vidaya Keralam) |
Independent | Rs 17.63 lakh | Rs 59.7 lakh |
T SASI
72, Graduate, Pensioner |
Independent | Rs 16.60 lakh | Rs 3.69 lakh |
M S SUBI
34, 10th std, Private Employee |
Independent | Rs 3.51 lakh | Rs 3 lakh |
NANDHAVANAM SUSEELAN
66, 8th std, Press |
Independent | Rs 3 lakh | Nil |
Source: https://affidavit.eci.gov.in/showaffidavit/1/S11/20/PC