BJP's OBC commission pitch to counter Cong in Guj, Karnataka

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

With the hoping for OBC consolidation in its favour in and Karnataka, the is likely to play up the opposition party's decision to stall the Modi government's OBC commission bill in to counter it in the two poll-bound states.

A day after the received a boost with the decision of OBC leader Alpesh Thakore to join the party, sources sought to play down its impact, saying Thakore is an untested electoral player.


Thakore had also chief some time ago before he made his announcement yesterday after meeting vice-president Rahul Gandhi.

"Unlike the Congress, we have a string of well-entrenched community leaders across We could not have conceded so much to an outsider as the Congress, which has been out of power for over 22 years and has seen desertion by its top leaders," a leader said, noting that its pre-eminent leader and Prime Minister Modi also hails from an OBC caste.

A key pro-OBC plank of the saffron party in the western state will be a bill that the central had brought in in the Monsoon Session, seeking to give constitutional status to the OBC commission, putting it at par with the SC and ST commissions.

The will also highlight the Centre's decision to raise the creamy layer cap for OBC families to Rs eight lakh from Rs six lakh, and then to form a commission to look into sub-categorisation of other backward classes (OBC) quota.

While raising of the creamy layer cap will mostly help the relatively well-off among the OBC castes, the proposed sub-categorisation of quota is aimed at helping economically and socially weaker OBC castes, a social group being wooed aggressively by the under Modi and Shah with considerable success so far.

The constitutional amendment bill, however, could not be passed as the stalled it in the Rajya Sabha, following its passage in the Lok Sabha.

Top state leaders besides Shah have addressed OBC meets in

The sources said the would rely on a similar plank in where Chief Minister Siddaramaiah, who himself hails from a backward caste (Kuruba), of the is relying on a coalition of OBCs, Dalits and minorities to win a second term.

Assembly polls are slated for December, while is likely to face it early next year.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, October 22 2017. 16:22 IST