<p>At least four major caste groups in Karnataka are engaged in a quota war and the BJP seems caught thick in the middle of the action. It is anybody’s guess how this will pan out for the saffron party. </p>.<p>These demands are coming from communities that cannot be ignored and as part of the BJP’s larger Hindutva agenda, their appeasement is a high-stakes game. </p>.<p>However, given its expansionist agenda, the BJP has been looking to break the Congress’ hold on the Ahinda, a Kannada acronym for minorities, backward classes and Dalits. </p>.<p>It appears to be headed that way in Karnataka: The Scheduled Castes have demanded an increase in their state quota from 15% to 17% and the Scheduled Tribes from 3% to 7%.</p>.<p>The Kurubas have intensified their demand to be included under the ST list, whereas the government is keen to give Veerashaiva-Lingayats OBC status nationally, with the Panchamshalis, a sub-sect, wanting Category 2A status in the state. </p>.<p>A Cabinet sub-committee headed by Social Welfare Minister B Sriramulu is looking into the SC/ST quota hike, which is seen as a way to buy more time. But, it is Sriramulu, a Valmiki, who spearheaded the ST quota hike demand. Likewise, the Kuruba agitation is led by the party’s own RDPR Minister K S Eshwarappa. There are influential seers, too, backing these demands.</p>.<p>At present, Karnataka provides 32% reservation for OBCs, 15% for SCs and 3% for STs, totalling to 50% as capped by the Supreme Court. </p>.<p>If the BJP decides to go ahead with hiking the SC/ST quota, the 50% cap will be breached, a legal quagmire. </p>.<p>One way forward is to redraw the existing state quota, which will mean cutting more pieces from the same pie. This will have political ramifications. </p>.<p>For instance, placing the Kurubas in the ST list will pit them against the Valmikis. </p>.<p>And, if the numerically-strong Panchamasalis are moved from Category 3B to Category 2A, political equations will be altered. Under Category 3B, the Veerashaiva-Lingayats currently get 5% reservation. Under Category 2A, there are 102 castes and their sub-sects sharing 15% reservation and they are likely to go up in arms if the Panchamasalis are put in the same basket with them. </p>.<p>“Whatever we do, reservation should not exceed 50%,” Karnataka State Commission for Backward Classes chairperson Jayaprakash Hegde points out. </p>.<p>Politically, the BJP can score brownie points with Eshwarappa emerging as the Kuruba leader, what with former Congress chief minister Siddaramaiah, seen as an Ahinda champion, keeping away from the movement.</p>.<p>“The BJP doesn’t have to sway an entire community towards them. They just have to split votes,” a Congress leader says. </p>.<p>Chief Minister B S Yediyurappa himself is pushing for national OBC status for Veerashaiva-Lingayats, the community he belongs to. This will give them a share in 27% quota for central government jobs and educational institutions. </p>.<p>But, the frenzy around reservations is akin to running with the hare and hunting with the hounds, political analyst D Umapathy says.</p>.<p>“Firstly, the RSS is against reservations. Where will these reservations be put to use anyway? With the government not recruiting and PSUs disinvested, where are the jobs,” he asks. </p>.<p>Former advocate-general Ravivarma Kumar says the only rational approach is to look at the yet-to-be-made-public socio-economic survey or the caste census.</p>.<p>“The Supreme Court has already capped reservation at 50%. As chief minister, Veerappa Moily had increased reservation to 73%. This was stayed by the apex court and reduced to 50%, restoring the status quo. Finally, the court remanded the matter back to the government asking for empirical data to justify the 73% reservation. That’s why the survey becomes important,” Kumar explains. </p>
<p>At least four major caste groups in Karnataka are engaged in a quota war and the BJP seems caught thick in the middle of the action. It is anybody’s guess how this will pan out for the saffron party. </p>.<p>These demands are coming from communities that cannot be ignored and as part of the BJP’s larger Hindutva agenda, their appeasement is a high-stakes game. </p>.<p>However, given its expansionist agenda, the BJP has been looking to break the Congress’ hold on the Ahinda, a Kannada acronym for minorities, backward classes and Dalits. </p>.<p>It appears to be headed that way in Karnataka: The Scheduled Castes have demanded an increase in their state quota from 15% to 17% and the Scheduled Tribes from 3% to 7%.</p>.<p>The Kurubas have intensified their demand to be included under the ST list, whereas the government is keen to give Veerashaiva-Lingayats OBC status nationally, with the Panchamshalis, a sub-sect, wanting Category 2A status in the state. </p>.<p>A Cabinet sub-committee headed by Social Welfare Minister B Sriramulu is looking into the SC/ST quota hike, which is seen as a way to buy more time. But, it is Sriramulu, a Valmiki, who spearheaded the ST quota hike demand. Likewise, the Kuruba agitation is led by the party’s own RDPR Minister K S Eshwarappa. There are influential seers, too, backing these demands.</p>.<p>At present, Karnataka provides 32% reservation for OBCs, 15% for SCs and 3% for STs, totalling to 50% as capped by the Supreme Court. </p>.<p>If the BJP decides to go ahead with hiking the SC/ST quota, the 50% cap will be breached, a legal quagmire. </p>.<p>One way forward is to redraw the existing state quota, which will mean cutting more pieces from the same pie. This will have political ramifications. </p>.<p>For instance, placing the Kurubas in the ST list will pit them against the Valmikis. </p>.<p>And, if the numerically-strong Panchamasalis are moved from Category 3B to Category 2A, political equations will be altered. Under Category 3B, the Veerashaiva-Lingayats currently get 5% reservation. Under Category 2A, there are 102 castes and their sub-sects sharing 15% reservation and they are likely to go up in arms if the Panchamasalis are put in the same basket with them. </p>.<p>“Whatever we do, reservation should not exceed 50%,” Karnataka State Commission for Backward Classes chairperson Jayaprakash Hegde points out. </p>.<p>Politically, the BJP can score brownie points with Eshwarappa emerging as the Kuruba leader, what with former Congress chief minister Siddaramaiah, seen as an Ahinda champion, keeping away from the movement.</p>.<p>“The BJP doesn’t have to sway an entire community towards them. They just have to split votes,” a Congress leader says. </p>.<p>Chief Minister B S Yediyurappa himself is pushing for national OBC status for Veerashaiva-Lingayats, the community he belongs to. This will give them a share in 27% quota for central government jobs and educational institutions. </p>.<p>But, the frenzy around reservations is akin to running with the hare and hunting with the hounds, political analyst D Umapathy says.</p>.<p>“Firstly, the RSS is against reservations. Where will these reservations be put to use anyway? With the government not recruiting and PSUs disinvested, where are the jobs,” he asks. </p>.<p>Former advocate-general Ravivarma Kumar says the only rational approach is to look at the yet-to-be-made-public socio-economic survey or the caste census.</p>.<p>“The Supreme Court has already capped reservation at 50%. As chief minister, Veerappa Moily had increased reservation to 73%. This was stayed by the apex court and reduced to 50%, restoring the status quo. Finally, the court remanded the matter back to the government asking for empirical data to justify the 73% reservation. That’s why the survey becomes important,” Kumar explains. </p>