An editorial
in the CPI-M's official party journal said: "It is for the Congress
leadership to decide whether it wants to be seen as kowtowing to the
pressures of the Bush administration or acting democratically and
heeding the voice of Parliament and the people." Heeding the voice of
Parliament is all right. But of the people? The N-deal never figured in
the last poll campaign. How do we know what people think of it? It is
possible they might oppose it. But does that not need to be tested?
Forget the N-deal. A much larger question needs consideration: how far
really is the will of Parliament indicative of popular opinion on any
issue? Merely because MPs are elected by people, it is facile to
conclude that the majority view in Parliament represents the majority
view of the public. This conclusion is facile because our Constitution
is subverted, our political system is debased, and our electoral system
is perverted. The lofty principles of democratic representation crumble
in the dust of ground realities. Our honorable MPs rarely speak for the
people. They speak for themselves, for their narrow partisan interests.
No national leader has emerged who did not participate in the freedom
struggle. People’s sentimental attachments to freedom struggle
personalities enabled political dynasties to flourish. No national
leader has emerged in post-Independence India because the last national
issue that engaged the public mind was our freedom struggle. Leaders who
participated in that struggle obtained national relevance. True, the
opposition to the Emergency did become a national issue. But the
Emergency was provoked by an official miscalculation. It was led by
events, not consciously planned by political leaders.
Are there really no national issues debated and decided upon by the
nation? Or is our electoral system perverted? Consider the issue of OBC
job reservation. It is perceived by both media and politicians as a
powerful election issue. In fact, this issue, as declared election
policy, has never delivered results. When VP Singh first took it up in
the UP Assembly poll after demitting office as PM, he, in partnership
with Laloo Yadav, was trounced by the Mulayam Singh-Kanshi Ram combine.
The latter never made OBC reservation an election issue. The former did.
Mulayam Singh and Kanshi Ram simply got their respective Yadav and Dalit
vote banks together to win handsomely. That is what politicians have
been doing without fanfare since the days of Pandit Nehru.
Local ground realities that dictate caste alignments are wholly
different from caste based reservation as national policy over which
media pundits swoon with emotion. If Mulayam Singh indeed signifies OBC
reservation as his policy, why have the Kurmis and the Lodhs not joined
up with him, creating instead their own parties? Why do the Vannyars of
the PMK heed Ramdoss and not blindly follow Karunanidhi, who fancies
himself as the champion of OBC interests? The truth is that caste based
reservation as principled national policy was propagated only by Lohia,
VP Singh and, briefly, by Charan Singh. Lohia was never properly tested
on this policy. Both VP Singh and Charan Singh failed miserably after
they officially adopted it as election agenda.
Elections here are in fact fought solely on local issues, in 543
constituencies. No aggregate of local issues can be magically
transformed into a mandate for any national agenda. The majority view of
MPs therefore does not necessarily represent the majority of the
electorate, since national issues have never figured as such in a
general election. The thirty or forty odd political parties that enter
Parliament do observe the ritual of preparing their election manifestos.
Do their supporters really read them? That is why, over the years,
elections have degenerated into tribal battles fought on caste and
communal loyalties. This is the ground reality. It could be dangerous to
continue ignoring it.
The electorate should not be blamed for getting divided into caste and
communal groups. Indeed, the Indian people deserve praise for displaying
a dogged faith in democracy: they continue to vote in elections despite
the political betrayal they repeatedly suffer. Politicians are a class
that seeks power any which way. With local issues dominating over
national issues in the polls, politicians are led inevitably into
whipping up sentiments related to local identity. These offer the surest
and swiftest way of garnering support. That is why frustrated aspirants
for power in fringe societies slip into separatist movements based on
ethnicity or religion. That is why even mainstream regions like
Maharashtra are throwing up politicians fanning separatism for quick
poll dividends.
National leaders could stop the rot. But where are national leaders? Are
there any left in India? How might they be created? In this, we could
take a leaf from America. The US electoral system itself ensures that by
the time a party chooses its Presidential candidate he or she becomes a
national icon to be studied under a national scanner: to win nomination
an aspirant must campaign across the nation and give his views on
national issues. This process identifies national issues and creates
national leaders. Who had heard of Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton before
he got the Democratic nomination? Who had heard of Barak Obama before he
became aspirant for the Democratic nomination? Today, all America --
indeed the world -- is aware of Obama and deliberates on his enunciated
policies.
India needs to reappraise its political system. The main executive needs
to directly approach the electorate with his agenda and obtain a direct
mandate from the public. That will concretize accountability. It will
identify national policies. It will deliver a national mandate.
If the Constitution is interpreted as originally written our political
system would become Presidential without constitutional change. As
suggested earlier in these columns, the only amendment required to
accomplish this would be to make the election of the President,
Parliament, and all the assemblies concurrent. And also give them fixed
simultaneous terms. Such an electoral change would not in any way alter
the basic structure of the Constitution. Newly elected MPs and MLAs
would elect the new President. That would give the President a popular
mandate as in a direct election.
Whether this or any other amendment to the present system is adopted,
one thing is clear: the present system is neither democratic, nor does
it deliver.
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