Reference Text
Time Left10:00
In
1975,
Vajpayee
was
arrested
along
with
several
other
opposition
leaders
during
the
Internal
Emergency
imposed
by
Prime
Minister
Indira
Gandhi
of
the
Indian
National
Congress
party.
A
coalition
of
parties,
called
the
Janata
Party,
won
the
1977
general
elections.
Morarji
Desai,
the
chosen
leader
of
the
alliance,
became
the
prime
minister.
Vajpayee
served
as
the
Minister
of
External
Affairs,
or
foreign
minister,
in
Desai's
cabinet.
As
foreign
minister,
Vajpayee
became
the
first
person
in
1977
to
deliver
a
speech
to
the
United
Nations
General
Assembly
in
Hindi.
The
Janata
Party
was
dissolved
soon
after
Morarji
Desai
resigned
as
Prime
Minister
in
1979.
The
Jana
Sangh
had
devoted
its
political
organisation
to
sustain
the
coalition
and
was
left
exhausted
by
the
internecine
political
wars
within
the
Janata
Party.
dead
link
Erstwhile
members
of
the
Bharatiya
Jana
Sangh
came
together
to
form
the
Bharatiya
Janata
Party
(BJP)
in
1980,
with
Vajpayee
as
its
first
President.
The
BJP
evolved
into
the
primary
opposition
group
in
Indian
politics,
and
Vajpayee
an
important
political
figure.
The
1984
general
elections
were
held
in
the
wake
of
Prime
Minister
Indira
Gandhi's
assassination
by
her
Sikh
bodyguards.
While
he
had
won
the
1977
and
the
1980
elections
from
New
Delhi,
Vajpayee
shifted
to
his
home
town
Gwalior
for
the
election.
Vidya
Razdan
was
initially
tipped
to
be
the
Congress
(I)
candidate.
Instead,
Madhavrao
Scindia,
scion
of
the
Gwalior
royal
family,
was
brought
in
on
the
last
day
of
filing
nominations.
Vajpayee
lost
to
Scindia,
managing
to
secure
only
29%
of
the
votes.
Gandhi's
assassination
generated
sympathy
for
the
Congress,
leading
to
a
massive
victory
at
the
polls.
BJP
could
only
win
two
seats
in
parliament.
Vajpayee
offered
to
quit
as
party
president
following
BJP's
dismal
performance
in
the
election,
but
stayed
in
the
post
until
1986.
He
was
elected
to
the
Rajya
Sabha
in
1986
from
Madhya
Pradesh,
and
was
briefly
the
leader
of
the
BJP
in
parliament.
In
1986,
LK
Advani,
took
charge
as
the
party
president.
Beginning
in
1990,
the
BJP
became
the
political
voice
of
the
Ram
Janmabhoomi
Mandir
Movement
which
sought
to
build
a
temple
dedicated
to
the
Hindu
god
Rama
in
Ayodhya.
The
temple
would
be
built
at
the
site
believed
to
be
the
birthplace
of
Rama
by
demolishing
a
16th
century
mosque,
called
the
Babri
Masjid,
which
then
stood
there.
In
December
1992,
a
group
of
religious
volunteers
led
by
members
of
the
BJP,
Rashtriya
Swayamsevak
Sangh
(RSS)
and
the
Vishwa
Hindu
Parishad
(VHP),
tore
down
the
mosque.
BJP's
role
in
the
movement
led
to
major
political
gains.
Victory
in
the
assembly
elections
in
Gujarat
and
Maharashtra
in
March
1995,
and
a
good
performance
in
the
elections
to
the
Karnataka
assembly