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COLUMNIST | Sunday, November 22, 2009 | Email | Print |


Arrogant Congress, absent Opposition

Swapan Dasgupta

There are three striking features about anniversaries. The first is their sheer arbitrariness — what, for example, is so significant about the 100 days we so love to observe? The second, and this applies mainly to societies (not India) which have a marked sense of history, is their commercial potential. The 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall proved very lucrative for publishers, just as ‘royal’ occasions in Britain are a good time for the producers of memorabilia. Finally, the decision which anniversary to observe and which to ignore is dictated by expediency and politics.

This week India will be commemorating the first anniversary of the jihadi attack on Mumbai on November 26 last year. If initial trends are any indication, it is likely to become another occasion for media-sponsored indignation by celebrities — the spurious enough-is-enough syndrome until the fire next time. It will also be the occasion for some mindless repetition of meaningless homilies such as the mantra that “terrorists have no religion”. That their astonishing conviction stems from theology is something we can’t discuss in polite company. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, quite fortuitously, will not be there to share the popular grief over independent India’s most astounding show of ineptitude. He will be busy telling those Americans who care to listen that India harbours no ill will towards those who are determined to set our house on fire.

Despite the odd outbursts of anger at those responsible for the monumental cock-ups in Mumbai, the anniversary of 26/11 is good news for the Government. Since it is just not done to inject partisan politics into the proceedings, India will use the occasion to demonstrate its amazing resilience, the proverbial stiff upper lip we didn’t even know we had. Politically speaking, Hindu fatalism and the cheapness of human life are the best guarantees of a pernicious culture of non-accountability.

This week, however, marks another anniversary. Exactly six months ago, on May 22, Manmohan Singh was sworn in Prime Minister for a second time. It was an occasion that was greeted by most Indians with a sigh of great relief: Not because the electorate was star struck by the first innings of the UPA but because it spared India a bout of instability and Madhu Koda-type governance at the Centre. The UPA-2 assumed office with everything going for it: Continuity at the top, enhanced self-confidence of the Gandhis, a stronger Congress and weakened coalition partners and, above all, an Opposition in total disarray. The UPA-1 was a post-election construction and was prey to conflicting political pressures and blackmail. There were no mitigating factors holding back UPA-2.

Six months is too short a time to judge a Government’s performance but it is sufficient to assess the broad direction in which it is heading. It allows us to take a call on where India will find itself at the time of the 2014 poll. Sadly, the broad conclusions don’t inspire great confidence in the future of a country that believes it is a world power and doesn’t behave like one.

To begin with, there are unmistakable signs of the Government pulling in different directions and Cabinet Ministers doing their own thing. The sugar kerfuffle which led to Delhi being overrun by angry farmers was a classic example of the left hand not knowing what the right hand was up to. The contentious Ordinance was blamed on Sharad Pawar’s proximity to an organised lobby. That was always well known. Why did the Cabinet not apply its mind to the Ordinance in the first place?

Cabinet Ministers, it would seem, love doing their own thing. Mamata Banerjee has chosen to use the Railways as a parallel administration for West Bengal. Her priorities are building sports stadiums, shoring up bankrupt Bengali newspapers, giving lectures to Bengali IAS officers and even indulging Maoists; trains comes low down on her dhobi list.

Mamata, it may be said, is not under the political control of the Congress. Moreover, she has to be indulged for her undeniable success in breaching the hitherto impregnable Red bastion in West Bengal. But that rule doesn’t apply for Jairam Ramesh who appears to have put self-glory ahead of everything else. It would interest the PM to know that officials are mortified over what Ramesh may concede inside the ‘green room’ at the climate change conference in Copenhagen next month. His perception of national interests seems at odds with the national consensus.

Giving Ministers autonomy is a good thing but the Cabinet seems to be operating like a confederacy. There are pro-China Ministers, pro-America Ministers, and pro-highest bidder Ministers doing their own thing. The External Affairs Minister, on his part, is emerging as the Shivraj Patil of the UPA-2 Government. The impending Commonwealth Games fiasco epitomises the crisis triggered by a lack of direction. No wonder the Finance Minister despairs of the alarming state of public finances — the austerity drive having been quietly punctured by angry politicians. As for reforms: What reforms?

What is particularly alarming is that the collapse of the Opposition has injected into the Congress an astonishing degree of arrogance. Thus, convicted killer Manu Sharma is let out by an unfazed Delhi administration to drink in pubs and campaign for his father; Madhu Koda is handled with kid gloves because of a fear that he may talk; the scandals of A Raja are left to the media to unearth because officials can’t displease the DMK; and, as for the soaring price of food, no one is responsible.

It would have been a good time to be in the Opposition. Except that the Opposition is busy either spinning yarns or imagining that the future lies in gau, gram and, presumably, gobar. India has got the Government (and Opposition) it deserves.


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COMMENTS BOARD ::


 
Bullet Arrogant Govt, Abscent Opposition & Averting Media
By Raman on 11/26/2009 8:34:24 PM

Excellent article. BJP bashers should remembered that BJP was stabbed to near death from back & front by RSS and Pseudo-secular forces respectively. RSS was not happy because BJP top brass has become popular and not toeing their line. Pseudo-secular forces got a fantastic chance to stab the already back-stabbed BJP from front as if they are heroes. RSS is responsible for existing worst situation in India today.

Bullet Common people are absent. not opposition.
By Dr. Nilima Satish on 11/25/2009 10:37:25 AM

If it is possible in India that without taking parliament into confidence any treaty can be signed, any commision can be apponted, any criminal becomes minister etc. by ruling party,. Its useless to talk about opposition. Has BJP not raised voice against quatrochi, Koda, Raja, Price Rise, Nuclear deal, fake inflation rate, fake growth rate etc.? Thanks to the media that we know nothing.

Bullet Her majesty's disloyal opposition
By Jitendra Desai on 11/24/2009 8:28:49 PM

You are right. Opposition has vacated the space provided to them by the voters. BJP with 116 seats can do a lot than get hysteric on "leakage" of a report when the whole system is leaking. Congress is degenrating in to a party of governance by defaault.

Bullet EXPECTING THE UNEXPECT
By ANOOPAM MODAK on 11/24/2009 12:16:30 PM

Though the author has dealt at length on various aspects of governance, the fact of the matter is that political parties in opposition sign a song, which is just the reverse, which they would have sung if they were in power. Governance have become stereotyped in matters of functioning, merely issuing statements and orders, without any mechanism in place to ensure its compliance. All political parties are the same side of a coin, leaving the other side absolutely blank.

Bullet Congress and Opposition
By Madhu Borwankar, Delhi on 11/22/2009 6:22:27 PM

Be it the NDA, be it the Congress on the treasury benches, things in India are bound to go from bad to worse. We can spend reams of paper explaining the reasons, but it will be to no use. As long as the objective of one and all, be it the businessman, be it the bureaucrat, be it the minister, is just MONEY, everything else will be relegated to the background. A good government and good opposition could at best marginally decrease the rate of rotting, but would it really matter ?

Bullet Gau, gram & gobar
By A S Kulkarni on 11/22/2009 3:40:17 PM

While we can argue endlessly whether the future of India lies only in gau, gram and gobar, we certainly have to appreciate that gau and gobar have to given a place in the sustainable development of the gram. And the evidence is not given just in our ancient texts but also in modern publications like The Economist.

Bullet Every one of us is a king...
By Partha on 11/22/2009 10:25:06 AM

Capital write-up, as usual. But what is the remedy? Or is it that there is none before 2014? But it seems four-and-a-half-year is too little a span for mending inner contradictions of all the political parties including the Congress.Survival of parties is more important in our country than that of the country itself.That's why scams only survive in various hues and our beloved motherland teeters. I think we can achieve same pace, if not more, with less people bent on serving people.

Bullet Desi leader's Tribute to 26/11 martyrs-Hon RR Patil back as Maharashtra Home Minister
By Rahul on 11/22/2009 10:09:58 AM

If we can have pro-China leaders, pro-America leaders and pro-highest bidder leaders (probably not mutually exclusive), why can’t 120 crore people have for themselves dedicated pro India leaders who can ensure that every person on this land will get a just and fair share of its resources and a fair chance to achieve their full potential. India needs leaders who will understand the meaning of its name Bharat and bring in light of truth and justice to this great and wonderful land.

Bullet RSS
By Sriram on 11/22/2009 8:58:19 AM

Future of India is completely in the hands of RSS now. BJP needs to revert to Hindutva to capture its lost base - Excellent article by AK Bhattacharya in the Organiser. Read it Swapan Ji. If BJP has to emerge strong, then it needs to stop being b-team of Congress right here, right now. and the catalyst will be RSS.

Bullet Penultimate paragraph sums it all:
By R. Kapoor on 11/22/2009 6:15:32 AM

So long Indian poors can be exploited, and they remain poor, it is OK. They love to be fooled, and they will still pour into the ballot stations and place a tick against the symbol 'open palm.' BTW one can notice that the FM has become the Deputy PM and indulges in affairs of other ministeries as well.

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