Ahmedabad (Gujarat): On October 20, when Prime Minister Narendra Modi paid a visit to the Tapi district and launched construction projects worth Rs. 2,192 crores for the development of tribal regions, it was evidently a palpable effort to saffronize the traditional Congress tribal vote-bank.
Though in the last three elections, BJP made a considerable dent in the so-called dedicated Congress vote bank, it goes without saying that in a state where more than 15 percent of the people belong to Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe, the saffron brigade needs to consolidate its roots among these backward people to have an edge in a triangular fight in the forthcoming elections.
From a layman’s parlance, the tribal votes bear significance because Gujarat has the fifth-highest Scheduled Tribes (ST) population in terms of absolute numbers in India. Nearly one-seventh of the state population is Adivasi, mainly concentrated in the eastern districts of the state bordering Rajasthan and Maharashtra. A dozen major tribes, among them Bhil, constitute half of the total ST share in the state.
Not only that, though there are only 27 reserved ST seats in the state there are many seats where the tribal and backward classes determine the fate of the candidates. There are 47 assembly seats in Gujarat where the ST population is more than 10 percent. In 40 assembly seats, there is more than 20 percent ST concentration. Thirty-one assembly seats, on the other hand, have more than 30 percent ST population.
Also read: Entry of AAP might be a problem for Congress in Central Gujarat
Though the tribal vote bank was considered to be a monopoly for Congress after 1990 BJP started to make a dent into it. Congress received around 60 percent of votes in the ST-reserved seats till the 1980s. This trend ended in the 1990 Assembly elections when Congress share was reduced to 36 percent in those reserved seats in Gujarat. Congress improved its performance in 1998. But the BJP has been in power since then. What is interesting, however, is that despite being out of power for two and a half decades in Gujarat, Congress has been able to maintain its ST base in the state.
BJP, which had just a 14 percent vote share in ST-reserved seats in the 1980 assembly polls, bagged 52 percent votes in 2019. In 2017 also when the BJP faced strong anti-incumbency and its seat tally first came down to double digits since the 1990 Assembly elections, the party improved its support by five percent in these reserved seats in comparison to the 2012 Assembly election.