Varanasi: After a year ago, In PM’s Constituency Varanasi, people says the Note Ban caused so many problems for them.
Balram, priest since 1996 and a city voter, says demonetisation damaged him economically; people were out of cash for months and he was unable to get dakshina or offerings for his religious rituals – his source of livelihood. Balram’s preferred BJP and PM Modi did not lose out on his political support in the UP assembly elections which was held four months after the Demonetisation.
Priest says that “Whatever Modi ji did was in the interest of the country and not in someone’s personal interest. Maybe with GST, he has rushed it and people are facing problems but I am sure there will be concessions. Demonetisation is exactly the kind of move administrators should make”.
According to NDTV, The BJP says it is exactly this sentiment among voters that helped the party win a big majority in the all-important UP assembly elections, where criticism of notes ban all around by a section of economists and social activists, and the anger of common people who stood for hours in bank queues did not translate into a vote against the BJP.
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In Varanasi for instance, the BJP and its allies made an 8/8 clean sweep, taking away assembly seats from both the Congress and the ruling Samajwadi Party. First-time legislator Neelratan Singh Patel of the Apna Dal, seized his seat Sevapuri from the Samajwadi Party and claims there was zero anti- demonetisation sentiment during his campaign. “When we faced the public, we did not need to answer anything. People were really happy with demonetisation. Even now there is no lessening in his support,” says the MLA whose party is member of the BJP-led alliance.
But is the soft glow starting to fade away now? Right after the BJP’s win in UP this year, India’s economic growth slowed down to a three-year-low in the April-June quarter drawing criticism once again towards PM Modi for his cash-ban move.
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60-year-old Lallan handloom weavers says demonetisation did not help him. After being out of work in the months after notes ban, Lallan says the middlemen who buy his sarees – that take over three days and two people to weave – still pay Rs. 850 per saree – last year’s rate – and that too all in cash. Their profit margins, Lallan says, in the markets of Varanasi, is double or triple this amount. “When his people come to us for votes we will ask them why I should vote for them? My position is exactly the same. Has my situation improved?” says Lallan.
“Do you expect the people to react so soon? This is a tsunami. It will slowly come and swallow everyone. Then people will start to react. Remember Modi ji’s first slogan “acche din aane waale hain”. Everyone used to say this. Do you still see this happening? People are slowly understanding everything,” says Ratnakar Tripathi, a senior Congress leader in Varanasi.