Being part of the BJP government, however, is a tightrope walk for him

Being part of the BJP government, however, is a tightrope walk for him

Being part of the BJP government, however, is a tightrope walk for him

Dushyant Chautala, who led his Jannayak Janata Party to  a splendid victory—remember the party is still a crawling baby—bagging 10 out of 90 seats, has not really surprised people clued in Haryana politics. The Indian National Lok Dal (INLD), and before that the Lok Dal, founded by his great grandfather Devi Lal, had always aligned with the BJP, and its precursor, the Jan Sangh, by being in the National Democratic Alliance fold. The major difference was whenever they were in power in Jat dominated Haryana, it was the INLD and not the BJP that was the senior coalition partner, and got the top job of chief minister.

But in changed times, Dushyant's agreeing to be the junior partner, but driving a reasonable bargain with the BJP, is a wise move. It behoves well for Haryana's social fabric—comprising Jats and others including Banias. The BJP has clearly not got the support of Jats, and in the government to be formed on Sunday, Dushyant will have ensured there is sufficient representation for them. 

More importantly, Dushyant has ensured his party does not get disintegrate, with MLAs being wooed and won over by the BJP. And, given the fact that they will enjoy power after a gap of over 15 years, his party workers will have reasons to rejoice.

The biggest achievement, however, is none of these. It is the performance of the JJP in comparison with that of the INLD headed by his uncle Abhay Chautala, who has the blessings and support of his father Om Prakash Chautala.

The performance has sealed the JJP as the real INLD, not a dumped bunch of people who formed a breakaway faction. The JJP also claimed its place as the inheritor of the legacy of Chaudhary Devi Lal, who is the “Jananayak” lending this name to Dushyant's party. Grand father Om Prakash Chautala and uncle Abhay Chautala's INLD has been swept aside even in seats that were once their pocket boroughs.

But all that is now behind Dushyant, who has earned his place as a Jat leader on par with  former chief minister and Congress leader Bhupender Singh Hooda. The  real challenge begins after the swearing in of the BJP-JJP coalition government on Sunday.

Will the government take pro-Jat decisions? If Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar had done that in his first term, the BJP would have won on its own. In the unlikely event of the Khattar government turning pro-Jat, Dushyant's flock is immediately threatened. Leaders of the  Shiromani Akali Dal next door have in the past charged the saffron party with trying to fish in its troubled waters and poach. So, safeguarding his legislators and party cadres, and getting rural and Jat favourable decisions will be Dushyant's immediate challenge. He will have to walk a tightrope just as much as Khattar will have to.