Political parties in Punjab adopt contrasting strategies amid India-Canada conflict
The Hindu
Punjab's political parties adopt contrasting strategies to cultivate vote bank ahead of 2024 polls.
As diplomatic relations between India and Canada take a nosedive, political parties in Punjab are treading cautiously. Mindful of the need to cultivate their vote banks ahead of the parliamentary election due in 2024, major parties are adopting starkly different strategies in the State, which has strong connections to a substantial diaspora population in Canada.
When Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stated, earlier this week, that there were credible allegations linking Indian government agents to the killing of Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a pro-Khalistan leader in Canada, it triggered a face-off between the two nations. In Punjab, parties are attempting to garner different vote banks — in the State itself, in other parts of the country, and among the diaspora.
Also read: Who was Hardeep Singh Nijjar, the Sikh activist whose killing has divided Canada and India?
The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was quick to hit out at Canada, dismissing Mr. Trudeau’s allegation and instead accusing his administration of giving a free hand to anti-India forces in his country. The BJP’s stance is expected to appeal to the minority population of Hindus in Punjab, and also evoke sentiments of nationalism in the rest of the country, against the backdrop of national security.
Senior BJP leader and former Chief Minister Amarinder Singh accused Mr. Trudeau of walking into a trap owing to his own vote bank politics, and putting Canada’s diplomatic relationship with India at risk. He pointed out that in 2018 itself, he had brought to Mr. Trudeau’s notice details of how Canadian land was being used against India; however, the Canadian government failed to take any remedial measures, as a result of which there has been an increase in anti-India activities in that country, Mr. Singh said.
The Congress party has also taken an anti-Khalistan position as a part of its larger national agenda, but at the same time, it is also playing it safe to keep its focus on regional electoral politics as well. Punjab Congress chief Amarinder Singh Raja Warring said that while the State unit of the party strongly opposed the idea of Khalistan, and has actively fought battles against anti-national forces, it also strongly opposes the labelling of anyone who speaks for Punjab as “anti-national”. He asserted that Punjabis do not need to give any proof about their “nationalism”.
A large number of people from Punjab, especially youth, travel abroad with the hope of a better life, and Canada is one of the most sought-after destinations. As the Sikh diaspora in Canada continues to grow — according to the 2021 census, there are around 7.71 lakh Sikhs in Canada, making up about 2.1% of its population — its influence, and financial clout, in Punjab electoral politics has also grown.