Modi’s rebranding: Tea seller in 2014, watchman in 2019

India PM continues with social media push, as he makes a bid for a second term in office with a freshly minted slogan.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi (C) gestures while being garlanded during a public rally, ahead of the Lok Sabha elections, in Jamui on April 2, 2019. - India is holding a general election to be h
Modi continues to be the champion of the hashtag with his party leading in social media campaigns [AFP]

New Delhi, India – Clever catchphrases and viral social media campaigns were a defining feature of the bid for power launched five years ago by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). The ruling Hindu nationalist party is credited with introducing professionally managed campaigning for elections.

Modi continues to be the champion of the hashtag and his party’s pioneering advantage on social media seems intact, as he makes a bid for a second term in office with a freshly minted campaign slogan: ‘Main bhi chowkidar’ (Me too watchman).

More than 900 million registered voters are expected to elect 543 members to the lower house of parliament in multiphase elections beginning on April 11.

The ‘chowkidar’ campaign was launched in response to a slogan coined earlier this year by opposition Congress party leader Rahul Gandhi: ‘Chowkidar chor hai’ (The watchman is a thief). Gandhi’s slogan had sought to highlight the prime minister’s role in facilitating an alleged scam in the purchase of Rafale fighter jets from the French company Dassault Aviation for nearly $9bn.

The counter-campaign quickly became another example of the BJP coming up with a winning repartee to an attack by the opposition.

“When we were running the campaign that our ‘watchman is a thief’, Modi was completely shaken and just to counter that campaign, he has come up with ‘Main bhi chowkidar'” campaign,” Congress leader Sanjay Nirupam, told Al Jazeera.

Modi's new campaign 'Main bhi chowkidar' also allows him to go into the area of defence and national security which is an area of comfort for him

by Dilip Cherian, public relations executive

Launched a fortnight ago, Modi’s ‘Main bhi chowkidar’ campaign features a title song, four short films, caller tunes, mass rallies, T-shirts, caps, badges, and a customary hashtag along with Modi’s trademark video conferences with his supporters.

The party also made use of the ‘conversation cards’ feature launched by Twitter and sent personalised messages to those who supported the chowkidar campaign from the prime minister’s official handle.

Modi changed his Twitter profile and added the prefix 'chowkidar' to his name [Noah Seelam/AFP]
Modi changed his Twitter profile and added the prefix ‘chowkidar’ to his name [Noah Seelam/AFP]

Modi even changed his Twitter profile and added the prefix ‘chowkidar’ to his name, tweeting: ‘Your chowkidar is standing firm and serving the nation. But I am not alone. Everyone who is fighting corruption, dirt, social evils is a chowkidar. Everyone working hard for the progress of India is a chowkidar. Today, every Indian is saying #MainBhiChowkidar.”

Political mileage

BJP leaders, cabinet ministers and hundreds of thousands of Modi’s online supporters soon followed and added the ‘chowkidar’ prefix to their names. The hashtag used by the Indian prime minister, who has a nearly 47 million followers on Twitter, trended for several days.

For months, Gandhi has relentlessly taunted Modi with his ‘Chowkidar chor hai’ slogan, accusing the government of corruption and granting favours to corporations that are close to the prime minister. Modi and his BJP party have denied the corruption claims.

This is not the first time that Modi and his party have successfully turned opposition criticism into political campaigns.

In the run-up to the 2014 elections, BJP launched the ‘Chai pe charcha’ (Conversations over tea) campaign, after senior Congress leader Mani Shankar Aiyar dubbed Narendra Modi a ‘chaiwala’ (tea seller) and mocked his prime ministerial ambitions saying that a place will be identified for him to distribute tea.

The senior Congress leader’s comments were perceived as elitist and a sign of the party’s arrogance, causing serious damage to the party which had fought for India’s independence in 1947.

The BJP won the 2014 elections in a landslide, while the Congress party was reduced to 44 seats, its worst performance on record.

Supporters of India's main opposition Congress shout slogans against Prime Minister Modi in Kolkata [Rupak De Chowdhuri/Reuters]
Supporters of India’s main opposition Congress shout slogans against Prime Minister Modi in Kolkata [Rupak De Chowdhuri/Reuters]

Social media head of Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), the party which currently governs Delhi, said that unlike the 2014 ‘Chai pe charcha’ campaign, the current one isn’t going to help the BJP in the upcoming elections.

“At a deeper level what we see is that the BJP and Modi have tried to take the focus away from the real issues that are plaguing the country. The real issues of economy, jobs and women safety are not being talked about,” Ankit Lal told Al Jazeera.

But BJP’s national spokesman told Al Jazeera that the ‘chowkidar’ campaign was adopted as a result of the negative campaign by the opposition.

Public relations exercise

Since coming to power in 2014, Modi has coined numerous slogans to highlight issues and government programmes such as ‘Beti bachao beti padhao’ (Save daughter, educate daughter), ‘Swach bharat abhiyan’ (clean India campaign), ‘Digital India’, ‘Make In India’ and ‘Startup India’.

But the opposition has accused the Modi government of wasting taxpayers’ money on public relations exercises.

Communist Party of India (Marxist) leader Brinda Karat described the marketing of Modi as “unprecedented”. “From the government money, for example, in the Beti bachao beti padhao campaign, half of the funds were spent on advertisements,” Karat said.

In December last year, the government told parliament that it had spent over Rs 5,200 crore ($7.5bn) in advertisements through electronic, print and other media since 2014.

Media reports have estimated that the election campaign for the BJP-led-National Democratic Alliance (NDA), will cost around ₹2,500 crore ($3.6bn) with 20-25 creative agencies deployed to manage its traditional and social media strategies.

The chairman of the Perfect Relations public relations firm, Dilip Cherian, told Al Jazeera that “such media campaigning has worked for Modi in the past and he thinks that it might work for him again”.

Cherian said that “Modi’s approach is brave” as he takes the opposition head on with his “offensive strategy”.

“Modi’s new campaign ‘Main bhi chowkidar’ also allows him to go into the area of defence and national security which is an area of comfort for him,” Cherian said.

Source: Al Jazeera