‘Vaishnaw for RS’ is part of larger deal for Odisha polls

Vaishnaw had never been in parliament when he was named as the BJP candidate in 2019 despite the party lacking the numbers in the state assembly.

Union Railway Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw

If anyone was surprised by the BJP naming Ashwini Vaishnaw as its candidate for the Rajya Sabha this morning - and the BJD announcing its support for his candidature barely within an hour - has obviously not been keeping track of political developments in Odisha. Or, s/he is too naïve to understand the intricacies of the unique brand of coexistence – and co-prosperity – the two supposed ‘rivals’ have forged over the years. That Vaishnaw is going to be the BJD-supported BJP candidate had become clear on Monday when the former named Debashish Samantaray and Shubhashish Khuntia as its candidates for two of the three Rajya Sabha seats from the state but stopped short of naming the third, despite having more than the required numbers.

But there are at least three major differences in the circumstances under which Vaishnaw was put up as the joint BJP BJD candidate in 2019 and now. First, Vaishnaw had never been in parliament when he was named as the BJP candidate in 2019 despite the party lacking the numbers in the state assembly. This time, he has a track record of nearly five years as Union Railway, Telecom & IT minister – and as an RS member from Odisha - to boast about. Second, it was announced by BJD supremo Naveen Patnaik himself on live TV in 2019. (That he made a major faux pas by first announcing Vaishnaw as the "BJD" candidate, however, is a different story.) This time, the party merely issued a press release, signed by Patnaik himself, for a change - to announce the decision. Third, the simultaneous Lok Sabha and assembly elections were already over when Vaishnaw was nominated in 2019. This time, the elections are barely weeks away.