Difficult Word/ Phrase | Contextual Sense |
Abrupt | Exceedingly sudden and unexpected |
Wrest | forcibly pull (something) from something’s grasp |
Owe | Be obliged to pay or repay |
Throw his weight around | act aggressively and use their authority over other people more than they need to |
Rebellion | Organized opposition to authority |
Make way | Get out of the way |
Inherit | If you inherit something such as a task, problem, or attitude, you get it from the people who used to have it |
Predecessor | One who precedes you in time (as in holding a position or office) |
Baggage | burdensome, superfluous, or outdated ideas, practices, etc. |
Credentials | previous achievements, training, and general background |
Perception | View |
On tenterhooks | in a state of tension or suspense |
Change of guard | Replacement |
Succession | A following of one thing after another in time |
Bastion | A group that defends a principle |
Wobbling | fluctuating unsteadily |
Churning | in a state of turbulence |
Ripple effects | The effect of an event setting off other events in an unexpected way, or in unexpected areas |
Elevation | The act of increasing the power or scope of something |
Agnosticism | The disbelief in any claims of ultimate knowledge |
Crossover | A voter who is registered as a member of one political party but who votes in the primary of another party |
In an abrupt (Exceedingly sudden and unexpected) move few had anticipated, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) replaced Biplab Kumar Deb with Manik Saha as Chief Minister of Tripura, a northeastern State that the party had wrested (forcibly pull (something) from something’s grasp) from the Left in 2018. Mr. Saha’s rise in the BJP that he joined in 2016 after quitting the Congress has been dramatic, and he largely owes (Be obliged to pay or repay) it to Mr. Deb. The outgoing CM threw his weight (act aggressively and use their authority over other people more than they need to) behind Mr. Saha, who had succeeded him as president of the BJP State unit also. Public disapproval and rebellion (Organized opposition to authority) within the BJP cornered Mr. Deb, and he was forced to make way (Get out of the way) for Mr. Saha. Mr. Saha inherits (If you inherit something such as a task, problem, or attitude, you get it from the people who used to have it) at least a part of his predecessor’s (One who precedes you in time (as in holding a position or office)) baggage (burdensome, superfluous, or outdated ideas, practices, etc.). A couple of BJP MLAs have publicly expressed their unhappiness with the choice. Until he puts the party house in order quickly, establishes his credentials (previous achievements, training, and general background) independent of Mr. Deb, and improves public perception (view) about the State government, the new CM will remain on tenterhooks (in a state of tension or suspense). In Uttarakhand, the BJP changed the CM thrice ahead of the Assembly elections earlier this year. The Tripura Assembly elections are nine months away, and the change of guard (replacement) indicates the party’s assessment that course correction was required. Mr. Deb is the sixth Chief Minister to be replaced by the BJP in recent times, following Sarbananda Sonowal in Assam, B.S. Yediyurappa in Karnataka, Trivendra Singh Rawat and Tirath Singh Rawat in Uttarakhand in quick succession (A following of one thing after another in time), and Vijay Rupani in Gujarat.
The BJP takes all elections very seriously, but Tripura is special. The State was a bastion (A group that defends a principle) of the Left Front for decades until the BJP won the last Assembly election, signifying a unique ideological victory. Since then, the party has been wobbling (fluctuating unsteadily); two sitting MLAs, Sudip Roy Barman and Ashish Kumar Saha, left the party in February to join the Congress, potentially indicating a new churning (in a state of turbulence). A defeat next year could have ripple effects (The effect of an event setting off other events in an unexpected way, or in unexpected areas) in other States, particularly in the northeast, and the party wants to avoid that at any cost. That said, the elevation (The act of increasing the power or scope of something) of Mr. Saha, who has not risen through the Sangh Parivar ranks, suggests the BJP is also changing as it grows. True, there is no let-up in its Hindutva rhetoric, but it has perhaps become more opportunistic in using leaders from other ideological stables. Mr. Saha is the fourth person to become a BJP CM in a northeastern State, after crossing over from the Congress. Assam CM Himanta Biswa Sarma, one of them, is an influential actor in the BJP’s scheme of things now. The BJP continues to draft leaders from other parties in leadership positions across the country. Ideological agnosticism (The disbelief in any claims of ultimate knowledge) is nothing to be admired but it would be good if such crossovers (A voter who is registered as a member of one political party but who votes in the primary of another party) lead to a less polarised polity. There is no evidence of any such trend, but Tripura could be a start.
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