Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Adityanath Yogi is offered a turban at a program at Gorakhnath Mandir in Gorakhpur, U.P., March 26. (Press Trust of India)


If demonetization had not happened, I would have joined others in condemning the appointment of Yogi Adityanath in which Prime Minister Narendra Modi would have had a big say. The UP election results proved that too many mainstream analysts were quite wrong in their assessment that the demonetization bogey would sink Modi like the Titanic. The facts and figures might have been correct, but statistics never tell the full story, including the mental and psychological aspects that are at play. Or else, many would not consider Rahul Dravid to be the greater Test batsman than Sachin Tendulkar, writes Siddharth Srivastava. – @Siliconeer #Siliconeer #India #UttarPradesh #YogiAdityanath #BJP @NaMo #NaMo @Narendramodi #NarendraModi


Lets be clear about this, if the RSS and Modi were not on the same page about the new U.P. chief minister, he would never have been chosen. To be more precise, if the unassailable Modi did not want Adityanath, it would not have happened, just as it is the Khans who decide their heroine, not producers, directors or Kangana Ranaut.

The elevation of Adityanath could also put the Indian Prime Minister in a piquant catch-22 situation. As many observers seem to predict, deploying clinching YouTube evidence of the past, the divisive, firebrand Yogi will fail as CM causing U.P. to burn, the way it happened in the early 90s when the Babri Masjid was demolished. The blame would then fall squarely on Modi’s broad chest. Indeed, it is very easy to denounce Yogi, given his checkered past, hate speeches and spiteful comments, including comparing Shah Rukh Khan to a terrorist.

If Yogi needed to go back home to a wife every evening he would probably have not made such a statement. However, it is also true that Adityanath is devoid of qualities that we tend to dislike in others. Like the Samajwadi Party, he will definitely not spawn an extended family enterprise that will feed off his success, squabble for a bigger share of the political pie or else help themselves to a Lamborghini, to spin around the crowded streets of Lucknow. Having fought his way up from the ranks, Adityanath is also unlikely to disappear for breaks and holidays like Rahul Gandhi to de-stress and detox.

Most Indian parents will hammer their kids to work harder should they fail a big exam. Very few are as lucky as Gandhi.

Some may hate me for saying this, but Yogi is also gifted with an abstract quality called charisma, even if rustic and raw like Vin Diesel, that few are endowed. Other examples include, Modi or Indira Gandhi. It is for the same reason that Amit Shah does all the hard work, but Modi walks away with the accolades.

Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Adityanath Yogi during an inspection of Gomti Riverfront, one of the ambitious projects of Akhilesh Yadav-led Samajwadi Party government, in Lucknow, March 27. (Nand Kumar/PTI)

Though most seem to have ruled out this prospect, there is also a possibility that Yogi may actually succeed as CM, the way Modi did in Gujarat. Anything is possible in this world, including Virat Kohli getting out of form.

To everybody’s collective surprise, Yogi could focus on growth and governance for most part of his tenure, learning along the way from Modi the art of deftly interlaying the Hindutva card when necessary, especially before elections.

Indeed, should he succeed as CM, there could emerge a scenario that Yogi becomes a potent threat to Modi himself in the future, given the primacy of U.P. in the Lok Sabha. Modi could even find himself elevated to the hoary committee of has-beens, the margdarshak mandal, ironically created to defang and sideline L.K. Advani, the original patron and protector of the PM. But, the Modi-Amit Shah duo has not gotten so far in the politics by being naive.

There is a big chance that their next big plan may be to split U.P., effectively clipping Adityanath chances of taking center stage. At best he could then be a tall state leader like Shivraj Chouhan with little prospects at the national level. Anything is possible in politics and cricket, including Virat Kohli shouldering a spinning ball headed for the middle stump.