Bhagwant Mann: Singing His Way to Victory

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Chandigarh: Bhagwant Mann’s first parody album, ‘Gobhi Diye Kachiye Vaparne’ in 1993, was a spoof on inflation and political corruption. The highlight of the album, though, was his satire on the media. It was with this very wit that he made space for himself in politics, too.

With the Aam Aadmi Party victory in Punjab, Mann (48) has scaled a new high point in his public life. He began as a humourist during his college days in Punjab’s Suman in the early 1990s before he gained prominence in the corridors of power.

Kanwaljit Dhindsa, a close friend of Mann’s from college, said the AAP leader’s family comes from Satoj village near Suman. His father, Mohinder Singh, was a science teacher in a government school and wanted Mann to become a teacher like him. But he was born with a different talent. Initially, he wanted to become a singer. While singing remained a part of his creative journey, he gained fame through humour, satire and comedy.

“I believe his (Mann’s) talent was god-gifted. His quick wit and sense of humour that is alive even today were very popular in college. But he worked hard to hone his skills. He used to write his own script and perform it. I have seen him practising for hours before college festivals. He was in BCom second year when his first album was out. He left graduation midway and since then, there was no looking back,” Dhindsa said.

He added that not many know of Mann’s deep knowledge of sports and also the fact that he is a good volleyball player. “He plays it like a player, unlike other politicians who just show off,” said Dhindsa.

Mann’s rise as a humorist coincided with Punjab coming out of militancy in the early 1990s. There had been no melas and cultural festivals for one and a half decades preceding this.

New faces like Jaspal Bhatti, Bhagwant Mann and Harbhajan Mann emerged soon after the revival of cultural activities in Punjab post militancy.

The television boom and Mann’s shows like Jugnu Kehnda Hai and Jugnu Mast Mast with Rana Ranbir and Jagtar Jaggi made him a household name. He also participated in the early edition of the Great Indian Laughter Challenge in 2008, in which his present-day rival and Punjab Congress chief Navjot Singh Sidhu too joined as a judge.

His college friend and noted actor Karamjit Anmol said that being a satirist, Mann was already politically aware and often talked about his inclination to join politics.

Being an entertainer, he was well exposed to problems in villages and also fully aware of Punjab’s issues. “But I was surprised when he chose to join politics at the peak of his career in 2010 and since then he is fully devoted towards it,” Anmol said. “Show me another politician in Punjab who had to sell half of his property ever since he took the political plunge?”

Former BBC journalist Aarish Chhabra remembers interviewing Mann in 2011 about his political ambitions.

“At Mohali’s Dolphin Chowk, Balbir Singh Rajewal (now a famous farmers’ leader) and some others were leading a dharna over pending dues from the Punjab government. While driving by, I noticed Bhagwant speaking from the stage. I interviewed him the next day to gauge what he wanted to do. He was already a star satirist known for being politically aware, so it wasn’t unthinkable that he’d enter politics.”

Chhabra said: “He told me he was ready to lead a youth wing of the farmers to work towards achieving political power. And within months he took the plunge, though not with any farmers’ front but with Manpreet Badal, who then had parted ways with the Badal family of the Shiromani Akali Dal and formed his one political outfit, People’s Party.” In the 2012 assembly polls, Mann unsuccessfully contested for the first time from the Lehra constituency of Sangrur district.

But he gained prominence when during the height of BJP leader Narendra Modi’s popularity across the country, he joined the Aam Aadmi Party in March 2014. AAP was then barely two years old, but Mann registered a massive win from the Sangrur Lok Sabha constituency with over two lakh votes. He proved his mettle again during the 2019 Lok Sabha polls when he was re-elected from Sangrur. He was the only AAP MP to register a win in those elections.

But there are parts of Mann’s life that his rivals often use to target him.

While his speeches rooted in ordinary Punjabi language attracted the masses, and that has been his great strength as a politician, he has his staunch critics both within and outside the state.

For long, his rivals have claimed that he has a drinking problem and is thus not fit to run the state. Mann too publicly acknowledged this in the run-up to the 2019 Lok Sabha election and vowed not to drink again. His friends, however, believe his detractors are engaging in political propaganda.

Former MP from Patiala, Dharamvir Gandhi, who was one of the founding members of AAP in Punjab before he was suspended for locking horns with Kejriwal, said that Mann reached this position because of being Kejriwal’s ‘Yes man’.

“He (Mann) is not only a yes man, but he also managed the destruction and expulsion of many leaders in AAP, whom he sacrificed for his own selfish interest to gain prominence in the party. Anyway I wish him good luck,” said Gandhi.

Gandhi also referred to Mann’s alleged doublespeak when he resigned as AAP’s Punjab head in 2018 over Kejriwal’s apology to SAD leader Bikram Majithia on the drugs issue but came back 10 months later.

In 2017 polls, projecting Bhagwant as the chief ministerial face was an option available to the party. But the indirect projection of Kejriwal as a possible Punjab chief minister was a miscalculation that the party corrected this time.