Until a few years ago, Chhattisgarh was among the states where the BJP had the strÂÂoÂÂÂngest hold. A formidable chief minÂÂÂiÂster headed the state with an absolute majÂority for three full terms (2003-18), with no challenge or threat to his authority. Raman Singh had the total support of the central leadersÂhip and some of his governance practices even fouÂnd praise among activists and civil society leaders. Still, Singh was side-lined after the party바카라™s defeat in the 2018 assembly elections. Such is the crisis of second-rung leadership in the state today that with elections just a year away, the party is franÂtically looking for potential poll candidates, let alone a CM face.
Consider Gujarat, the party바카라™s strongest fort, a state it has been ruling since 1995. After its chief minister, firmly in the saddle during 2001-14, moved to the Centre as the PM, the state has seen three CMs in a short duration. Perhaps nothing exemplÂifies the state of the second-rung leadership in the party than this. For a long time, a duo reigned over the party marked by a staggering number of secoÂndary leaders, before it was replaced by another pair. Observers once used to ask: after Atal-AdvÂani, who? Now they ask: after Modi-Shah, who?
One can examine BJP바카라™s second-tier leadership through two broad frames바카라”the Centre and the states. Let바카라™s begin with the Hindi heartland, a zone on whiÂch rests the party바카라™s triumph over the last decade. The 10 Hindi-speaking states and the two wesÂtern states of Gujarat and Maharashtra fetcÂhed 85 per cent of BJP바카라™s total seats in the 2014 polls that changed the course of Indian politics.
Delhi once had a team of stalwarts like Madan Lal Khurana, Sahib Singh Verma, and Vijay KumÂar Malhotra바카라”who famously defeated former PM Manmohan Singh from the prestigious South DelÂhi Lok Sabha seat in 1999. Nevertheless, the party introduced Kiran Bedi overnight as its CM face for the 2015 assembly elections. Five years later, it chose Manoj Tiwari바카라”an east UP resident who had lost the 2009 Lok Sabha polls on a Samajwadi ParÂty ticket against Yogi Adityanath바카라”to lead the parÂty in the 2020 polls. Delhi voters rejected both imported faces.
The party was part of the ruling alliance in Bihar for two decades, but remained dependent on its ally, Nitish Kumar바카라™s JD-U, and couldn바카라™t develop its own leadership. Whenever Nitish pulled the rug, BJP was swept off its feet.
In Rajasthan, the party once had a stalwart in Bhairon Singh Shekhawat, who became chief minÂister on three different occasions. He was follÂoÂwed by Vasundhara Raje Scindia, who completed two full terms as CM. One may have to strain a bit to find another face after her.


Or take Karnataka. The state is going to polls early next year, but the ruling BJP is still battling with the election of its state president. While CM Basavaraj Bommai has thrown his weight behind existing president Nalin Kumar Kateel, seveÂral leaders, including former CM B.S. YediyuÂraÂppa바카라”recently inducted into BJP바카라™s parliamentary board바카라”seem to be pressing for change. YediyuraÂppa, who was asked to quit as CM in July 2021, is again emerging as a frontrunner to lead the party in the next elections in a state that remains BJP바카라™s only anchor in the south. Of the total 130 LS seats in Karnataka, Andhra PraÂdesh, Telangana, KerÂala, Tamil Nadu and PonÂdicherry, the BJP won only 21 in 2014, with 17 from Karnataka alone. In 2019, Karnataka contributed 25 of BJP바카라™s total 29 LS seats in the region.
The leadership issue takes a different turn at the central level. While India바카라™s oldest party has had only two presidents in the last 25 years, both from a single family, the BJP has seen as many as 10. But its PM contenders have always been limited. During the five-decade-long Atal-AdvÂani era, many leaders became president of the Jan Sangh and later the BJP, but the PM candidature was reserved only for the two. Vajpayee led the party in the LS elections from 1996 to 2004, followed by Advani after his retirement in 2009.
The BJP faced a major succession tussle after the electoral defeat of 2009, when the incumbÂent UPA government won a second term. The party leadership realised that they needed a post-ÂJan Sangh face to lead it in the new millennium, even as it found its state units weakened. It could win just five of the 814 seats in the 2011 assembly elecÂtÂions held in Tamil Nadu, Assam, Kerala, PondicÂhÂerry and West Bengal. Chaos ensued for long, befÂÂore many claimants emerged as PM candidaÂtes for the 2014 polls, including Arun Jaitley, SusÂhma Swaraj, Rajnath Singh and Nitin Gadkari. The party appeared to be headed towaÂrds a big crisis.
However, the BJP often recovers from such hiccups because of several factors, namely, a comÂmÂiÂtÂmÂent to the organisation, a shared ideology and a discipline that resolves any succession tussles. The party can choose a completely unknown ManÂohar Lal Khattar to lead Haryana or first-term MLA Bhupendra Patel to lead Gujarat after sacking Vijay Rupani mid-term, with other members obediently following the directions.
So in 2013, the then BJP president Rajnath SinÂgh chose Narendra Modi as the PM candidate, despite stiff opposition from within the party as well as from allies. Singh merely followed what his preÂdecessor had done two decades earlier. L.K. Advani had helped build a mighty political machiÂnery in the 1980s to lead the temple movement. With the Sangh Parivar solidly behind him, expeÂctations were high that he would declare himself as the PM candidate for the 1995 Lok Sabha polls. Instead, he declared A.B. Vajpayee as the candidate. Not even Vajpayee could believe it. Advani later wrote that his decision was to secure the best interests of the party.
BJP has also deviÂsed different methods to overcÂome the lack of leadership. In the NortÂhÂeast, where the BJP now rules several states, it still doesn바카라™t have many home-grown leaders. In states where the party had a weak leadership, it embÂrÂaÂced or appÂropriated ones from other parties, even diluting its Hindutva ageÂnda to forge new leaÂders. In states where it faced a stronger regÂional party, the BJP astutely entrenched itself in an alliance, allowing its partner to choose the CM candidate while supporting it as a junior partner. This includes PDP in KasÂhmir, SAD in PunÂjab, JD-U in Bihar and, more recently, the rebel Shiv Sena faction in Maharashtra.
A reason why the party has seen few rebelliÂons by second-rung leaders is its rising fortunes. TheÂre is occasional dissent, even desertiÂons by leaders like Yashwant Sinha, but no mass defectÂion. When Amit Shah became the BJP preÂsÂident in 2014 and launched a massive membersÂhip driÂve, the party had some 3.5 crore members. In just a year, it rose to 11 crore, reaching 17.4 croÂre in 2019.
Coming back to the original question바카라”who aftÂer Modi-Shah? Here바카라™s a clue. For several years, the BJP went to town with the Gujarat Model, claÂiming development and best governance practices. But this has now been replaced by the Yogi Model, which boasts of 바카라˜encounters바카라™ and bulldozers. CMs of several BJP states바카라”who are much oldÂer than the UP CM바카라”have been heard praising the Yogi Model. This journey, from the Gujarat Model to the Yogi Model, epitomises the shift in its politics. As of now, Yogi Adityanath becÂoming Modi바카라™s successor seems unlikely, but the shift in the party바카라™s messaging augurs its future plans.
(This appeared in the print edition as "The Behemoth")