The reason for that, as political analysts often point out, is the nature of the BJP’s graph in Karnataka – the party has grown fast but not organically, in terms of its ideological roots. Yediyurappa had traced out that graph in his farewell speech – from an outfit that found it difficult to muster even a couple of hundred people for its rallies in the early days, the party is now at the helm of affairs in Karnataka. But as Yediyurappa often likes to point out, there’s unfinished business at hand – that is, ensuring that it can comfortably win enough seats on its own to form a government.