Friday, 26 May 2023

SP gets organisational make-over to face BJP challenge head-on

 

After facing electoral setbacks at various levels since last year, the Samajwadi Party (SP) is trying to evolve into what it calls a “hybrid, mass-based party” with a new, dedicated organisational structure. The party has also decided to hold training camps for its workers in various Lok Sabha constituencies across the state on its ideology and equip them with arguments to counter the BJP.

With that objective, the party has tasked senior leaders with reconstituting booth committees in their Lok Sabha constituencies by inducting new workers to replace those who are inactive and the workers who have left to join other parties.

These in-charges have been directed to create a new organisational structure of zonal units, with an in-charge for each zone. There will be at least six zones in each Assembly segment, with each zone divided into six sectors. Each sector unit will oversee 10-12 booth units. During fieldwork, these Lok Sabha in-charges will also have to interact with the workers and the public in villages and urban areas.

The in-charges have to complete their task by June 5 so that the training camps can be started. The camps will be organised in groups of youth workers and local leaders from two constituencies each. “Akhilesh Yadav and other senior leaders will educate the workers on party ideology, failure of the BJP government in governance, and so on,” said a party leader.

On the decision to develop the new organisational structure, former minister and Kairana Lok Sabha in-charge Sudhir Panwar said, “SP is a mass-based party. But in the prevailing political scenario, it needs a structure to communicate its ideology and opinion on political matters, and raise awareness of the workers about the challenges. Hence, constituency in-charges have been appointed to build booth committees and form the zonal structures.”

Another party leader said the SP is a mass-based party that doesn’t make any distinction between voters and has remained inclusive irrespective of religion, caste, gender or economic status. “Various factors — like asymmetric treatment of some political parties by the media, open and blatant use of religion in politics, and saffronisation of institutions, have posed challenges for a mass-based party like the SP. Under the changed political landscape of UP. There is a need for a more cohesive organisational structure, and the SP is working on it,” he said.

Among the Lok Sabha constituencies where such in-charges have been appointed are Amethi and Rae Bareli, where the SP gave a “walkover” to the Congress in previous Lok Sabha elections. MLA Indrajeet Saroj is in charge of Rae Bareli as well as Kaushambi and Pratapgarh. In Amethi, the party has deployed former MLCs Sunil Sajan and Anand Bhadauria, and former MLA Arun Verma.

Senior party MLA and a Dalit face Awdhesh Prasad is in charge of Ayodhya while MLA Lalji Verma has been given the responsibility of four constituencies, including Azamgarh, from where Akhilesh Yadav was elected in 2019 but which the party lost to the BJP in a bypoll last year.

The party is also preparing to contest the Haridwar Lok Sabha constituency in Uttarakhand, where former MLA Kiran Pal Kashyap has been named the in-charge.

“Apart from looking after the formation of the organisational units, we are also meeting the new workers, putting up party flags at their homes and getting photographs clicked with them, to raise their morale and give a boost to organisational activities,” said former minister R K Chaudhary, who is in charge of the Mishrikh and Hardoi Lok Sabha constituencies.

A party leader, who chose to remain anonymous, said the Lok Sabha in-charges were appointed to give more depth to the organisation till the booth level on the lines of a cadre-based party. “We will retain our mass-based character, but will also have an organisational structure like a cadre-based party, making the SP somewhat of a hybrid party that is mass-based in ideology and philosophy, but with an organisation like a cadre-based party,” he said.

Another party leader said, “As a mass-based party, the SP’s strength is the dedicated Yadav vote bank, besides similar voters among some other OBC castes and Muslims. These people vote for the SP by trusting its socialist ideology and its top leadership. But the BJP and the BSP have organisational structures at various levels, from booth to state, which help them better communicate the party’s message to every voter. The BJP uses this structure to mop up floating votes and compensate for anti-incumbency. The SP felt the need for such a structure to use it in its fight against the BJP.”

https://www.englishbaby.com/findfriends/gallery/detail/2412340
https://www.maliweb.net/author/jaynetracy
https://p.mobile9.com/vivatrujillo/
https://artmight.com/user/profile/730474
https://openbci.com/community/people/ronagaines/
https://glremoved1angeleena.gamerlaunch.com/users/blog/6137424/2171460/how-to-download-install-psp-emulator-games-on-roid/?gid=580539

This Hema Malini-Jeetendra film rewards the hero for his mistakes, and leaves her blind

 For decades, the formula for romance in Hindi movies has pretty much stayed the same. The conflicts might change, but Hindi films want you invested in the journey of the lead couple as you root for their happily ever after. But Gulzar’s 1977 film is an anomaly in that respect. Starring Hema Malini and Jeetendra, the film leaves you convinced that Jeetendra’s Inder is kryptonite to Hema Malini’s Aarti. The film, which was written by the director himself, is a tragic tale of a woman who is doing really well in life until Inder walks in and ruins it all. But, the film doesn’t see it that way. Gulzar’s interpretation of the story paints Inder as the one who deserves pity even though he is directly responsible for Aarti losing her sight.

Aarti holds three things very dear to her life and in quick succession, she loses them all and in some way or another, Inder is responsible. After she loses the love of her life Chandan (Dharmendra, in a cameo), she becomes a recluse, but there too, Inder disrupts her grieving process and makes matters worse. When she has lost her sight and doesn’t want Inder in her life anymore, he lies and pretends to be someone else. When she breaks a sacred promise to honour the memory of her late lover, Inder again disrupts everything. It is more than obvious that Aarti should stay away from Inder under all circumstances but Gulzar tries to project Inder as the one who is living with survivor’s guilt. It was during an accident with Inder’s car that Chandan lost his life. All through the course of the film, it understands this guilt but tries to convince you that this is another form of love. We never see Aarti falling in love with Inder, but we do see Inder trying hard to make her life better.

kinara Directed by Gulzar, Kinara released in 1977. (Photo: Express Archives)

Gulzar has such sympathy for Inder that he projects his little gestures as sacrifices. In one scene, a character actually compares Aarti and Inder’s wounds and boldly states that Aarti’s injuries are just physical so she’ll heal with time but Inder won’t recover from his heartbroken state. This happens a few minutes after she has lost her sight because of Inder’s immature actions. Even though the film doesn’t blame Inder, it is also fully aware that Aarti deserves better.

Which is why, the last few minutes of the film feel like they were reshot after distributors rejected the initial cut. Though we don’t know if that really happened, but the jerky jump in the end surely feels like even the filmmaker wasn’t fully convinced with it. After the audience has stuck by Inder and Aarti for two hours, we see Aarti turn into a helpless woman who apologises to Inder for no reason. At one point, she is actually pleading with Inder to stay around even though less then 15 minutes ago she has asked him to never see her again.

Inder gets his hero sendoff that almost all heroes get in romance movies and the film gets its happy ending, even though it isn’t earned.

© IE Online Media Services Pvt Ltd

First published on: 27-05-2023 at 08:03 IST

    Tags:
    Bollywood Rewind
    Gulzar
    Hema Malini
    Jeetendra


https://www.youthkiawaaz.com/author/geyoc64930
https://deepai.org/profile/lancekaplan
https://seedandspark.com/user/miloputnam
https://bookme.name/aubreyandersen
https://supplier.ihrsa.org/profile/418754/0
https://www.quia.com/profiles/lobrien337

SP gets organisational make-over to face BJP challenge head-on

  After facing electoral setbacks at various levels since last year, the Samajwadi Party (SP) is trying to evolve into what it calls a “hybr...