28 August,2009 06:51 AM IST | | Chandran Iyer
RSS will consideru00a0 him for BJP boss but only if he tones down autocracy, reports Chandran Iyer from ground zero of hindutva, rss hq in Nagpur Chintan baithak: The RSS considers Narendra Modi to be more committed to its Hindutva ideology than L K Advani or Atal Behari Vajpayee
The Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) is likely to ask Gujarat CM and Hindutva stalwart Narendra Modi to head the BJP after current party president Rajnath Singh ends his term in December.
The buzz at the RSS national headquarters here is that Mohan Bhagwat, RSS supremo, is extremely keen to have hardliner Modi occupy political centerstage at the national level.
But, there is an important postscript.
Promoting Modi
Dilip Deodhar, a senior RSS watcher, who has written more than 30 books on the party pointed out, "Bhagwat may have told Modi that the RSS wants him to lead the BJP.
But on the spectacular condition that he amends his autocratic style of functioning, which Bhagwat feels is not in keeping with the RSS' style.
Modi has also been told to be more accessible to party workers." In fact, say RSS watchers, Modi has been told that the 2014 parliamentary elections for the party, could be held under his leadership, provided he changes his style of functioning.
In his home state, it is legend that Modi rarely meets his MLAs or cadres, yet always makes time for businessmen and investors.
A senior RSS activist pointed out that despite the condemnation for Modi by secularists, his credentials as the man who remodelled Gujarat cannot be denied.
"Modi also has a good equation with Bhagwat and the RSS considers him to be committed to the Hindutva ideology unlike Advani and Vajpayee with whom it has never had smooth equations," said the activist.
The only option
Said Deodhar, "Everyone in the RSS knows that sooner or later Modi will replace Advani, but nobody will speak officially as Bhagwat has asked everyone cadres and senior functionaries to be circumspect while talking to the media."
Deodhar added that had BJP leader Pramod Mahajan been alive, Modi wouldn't have stood a chance for the top post. "But now, the only person that Bhagwat says is fit enough for the role, is Modi."
A senior activist pointed to another overwhelming proof of the RSS' intimacy with Modi the choice of Ahmedabad for a RSS convention.
A three-day high level meeting of RSS intellectuals is being organised in Ahmedabad from September 18 in which 21 prominent RSS leaders will present papers to outline vision India 2025.
Old horse
RSS sources in Nagpur reiterated there was nobody who could match Modi's magnetism, especially Leader of Opposition, L K Advani.
M G Vaidya, RSS ideologue and former spokesperson admitted, "Advani has become a liability because of his age and it is in the interest of the party that he step aside and make way for younger leaders." But he refused to spell out who could replace Advani.
Another RSS source added that Advani knew the RSS was unhappy with him, yet he refused to step down.
A veteran RSS leader said the erstwhile RSS chief K S Sudarshan used to openly criticise former PM Atal Behari Vajpayee.
The former PM always maintained a studied silence and as a result he became larger than life and diminished Sudarshan's standing. This is something which the RSS does not want to do at this point of time.