If Narendra Modi is the Amitabh Bachchan of Indian politics, then Shatrughan Sinha is just being Shatrughan Sinha.
Like his alleged animosity with Amitabh Bachchan, his feelings towards his soon-to-be former party BJP were no secret. Justifying his moniker 'Shotgun', he rarely stopped taking potshots at the BJP.
But can Shatrughan Sinha be seen as BJP’s loss to the Congress? Or, is there more here than meets the eye?
Shatrughan Sinha’s entry to politics was in 1992, on the occasion of New Delhi by-election. It was for the Lok Sabha seat vacated by LK Advani, who won both New Delhi and Gandhinagar Lok Sabha seats in 1991's General Election - and decided to resign from the New Delhi seat.
It was a memorable election as 125 candidates - including Phoolan Devi -were in the fray. The BJP fielded Shatrughan Sinha against the Congress’s Rajesh Khanna.
Rajesh Khanna won by a little over 25,000 votes. (Rajesh Khanna: 1,01,625; Shatrughan: 73,369)
But this prestigious fight from Advani’s seat heightened Shatrughan’s significance in the party and it was a smooth stint - until the 2014 Lok Sabha Election in which Narendra Modi was the PM candidate. This now became an old school versus new school fight, as 72-year-old Shatrughan Sinha belonged to the Vajpayee-Advani sect.
From then on, it has been a dragged, and dull political journey, the only pepper being his unbridled attack against his party and party leaders.
Shotgun is a two-time MP from Patna Sahib. The constituency saw a heated fight between the BJP and the Congress in 2014 (Shatrughan Sinha: 4,85,905; Kunal Singh: 2,20,100). But Shotgun was not given a ministerial post, while he was a central minister in Vajpayee's Cabinet.
Clearly, this rankled.
And after the Congress’s big win in the 2018 Assembly elections in the Hindi heartland, he turned perceptibly towards Rahul Gandhi.
Why didn’t he resign from the party instead of being a rebel BJP leader, you ask?
Simple - he didn’t want to lose his Patna Sahib.
Why didn’t the party expel him?
Simpler. He would continue to be the MP, which the party didn’t want.
The party didn’t field him from Patna Sahib. Instead, it chose Ravi Shankar Prasad. In a desperate bid to retain Patna Sahib, now Shatrughan Sinha is crossing over to the Congress — the party against which he contested his first election.
Patna Sahib is not the Congress's stronghold though. It may now reap a rich dividend of Shatrughan's long political career.
Meanwhile, Shatrughan gets to contest from his home turf.
And the BJP is experimenting in its winning seat.
What remains to be seen is whether Patna Sahib goes for the party or the personality. Here's the irony - if it goes for the party, Shotgun will be a bitter pill for the Congress as well.