Commentary/Varsha Bhosle
Curtain Call
On Tuesday evening's television schedule, the news vied with Fawlty Towers
in terms of pure slapstick value. After a bit of channel surfing,
it was evident that the politicians won the day.
When legislators gathered in the Uttar Pradesh Vidhan Sabha
for the vote of confidence, and it became apparent that Chief
Minister Kalyan Singh would easily prove his majority, Congress
MLAs surged into the well of the House and Congress Legislature
Party leader Pramod Tiwari began beating up a security guard. Ms
Mayawati ordered the BSP to join in, and with fortification from
the Samajwadi Party, the entire corps of secular and democratic
forces advanced upon Speaker Kesri Nath Tripathi and began pelting
him with paper missiles.
Mr Tiwari then picked up a chair and
threw it at the speaker's podium, while another member yanked off
a steel microphone and hurled it at the communal forces. After
which, it was a free-for-all, no-holds-barred gorefest --
microphones, paperweights, chairs, files, uprooted plywood,
slippers and everything chuckable flying here, there and drawing
blood everywhere.
I monitored the news on Doordarshan, TVI and STAR -- and the
difference in emphasis was a lesson in itself. While STAR telecast
the views of the assaulted speaker, and TVI's anchor clearly
stated that the fracas was started by the Congress, with BSP and
SP members enflaming it, DD resisted the temptation to point
fingers and restricted itself to interviewing:
* a solemn AICC vice-president Jitendra Prasada -- "It is a black
day in the history of democracy. I urge the governor to impose a
Presidential rule in UP."
* A sardonic Sharad Pawar -- "Never has Indian democracy witnessed
such a shameful sight. I urge the governor to impose a
Presidential rule in UP."
* A po-faced N D Tiwari -- "It is a shameful day for Indian
democracy. We need Presidential rule in UP."
* The demure Ms Mayawati -- "I will see how Kalyan Singh becomes the chief minister. Saare Bharat mein hum aag laga denge"; and,
* Some SP spokesman (more of the same).
There is an excellent case for making Doordarshan an independent
authority.
As for me, I've been simply gloating away since the day Mayawati
withdrew her support to Kalyan Singh's government. Regardless of
the blatantly partisan Romesh Bhandari's recommendation of
dissolution of the House, and Sitaram Kesri's threat to withdraw
support to the UF government if it didn't sack Mr Singh, the UP
episode should teach the venerable BJP a lesson: Although it's
true that politics makes strange bedfellows, and that to succeed
in political affairs one needs a surfeit of tact and tactics, it's
just as true that without grit, vision and ideological purity,
political leadership remains a sham.
Despite having acquiesced to
Mayawati's every whim for 6 months, whither BJP's tact and tactics
now? I'd say that the legacy of those like the uncompromising Veer
Savarkar is what inspired the leadership to force a checkmate
today... So, no matter how much tact one has, without guts, one
can't do much in politics.
Needless to say, this elitist could never stomach the nexus
between the BJP and BSP. I couldn't forget Kanshi Ram's slapping
journalists a la an epee-waving Scaramouche (not that the press
doesn't deserve it). And if that weren't enough, there was his
answer to Seema Mustafa of The Asian Age: When she asked why he
hadn't included a single Chamar in Mayawati's first cabinet,
Kanshi Ram had replied, "They are here (pointing towards his
feet); do you want me to put them up there (pointing towards his
head)?" For the BJP to hobnob with such a messiah of dalit
emancipation... well, jaisa karo, waisa bharo. The oft-quoted
samajik samrasta ("social harmony") cannot be achieved by holding
hands with unscrupulous goons.
The pandemonium in the assembly brought to my mind the resolution
of confidence that Atal Bihari Vajpayee's 14-day government faced
last year: If you remember, the losers indulged in nothing more
provocative than the delivery of bitingly hilarious speeches. I'd
wondered then what the others would have done in BJP's stead;
well, we need wonder no more. The desperation of the kabar-mein-
do-peyr-latkaaye-hue Sitaram Kesri forced Prime Minister I K
Gujral's reluctant hand and caused President K R Narayanan to make
the unprecedented move of returning a proposal for the Cabinet to
reconsider the dismissal of the BJP government. It did -- but I
still think we're soon to visit the polls. Whichever way, Mr Kesri
certainly gave the Congress its curtain call.
At which point, we may as well ruminate over what could happen
again: Political pundits say this is an era of coalition
governments and that every party should mould itself around that
paradigm. The thing is, no matter which coalition takes control,
it is always the loser in the public eye -- for the main planks of
the constituent parties have to be abandoned. For instance, a
Left-backed Congress would have to dilute its economic reforms; a
propped-up BJP will be impotent to touch issues like the UCC; and
a Congress-borne SP won't stay long enough to wreck the nation
completely. Worse, no matter who forms the government, a majority
of people would always feel cheated -- there's no escaping that.
Whatever political analysts may say, there's no morality in post-
election alliances -- ethically, it's the same as defections. If
bizarre unions were to be declared before the polls, traditional
party-voters would look for other options -- especially where the
basic party-lines clashed violently with each other. Can you
imagine a stockbroker voting for a Congress about to sleep with
the Janata Dal? Will the Marxist accept Jyoti Basu consorting with
Mr Kesri? It's for the people to make compromises while exercising
their vote -- not for politicians to evolve a "common minimum
programme" after that vote is cast.
The only right step in a situation like this is to order a fresh
election -- where we are informed of all possibilities of
coalitions and support. Politicos needn't wheedle and deal to
wrest a power which is only ours to grant. On this expensive and
undesirable alternative, the best quotes came from two old hands --
one, a former President of India, and the other, our foremost
constitutional authority: Ramaswamy Venkataraman holds, "Democracy
is a costly affair. If you want people to have a voice, cost must
not be the concern." And Nani Palkhivala states, "We have to be
ready to face the situation (of re-election) even if it is at the
cost of the nation. That's the price a citizen has to pay for
democracy."
The developments in UP once again demonstrate that the
victimisation of and injustice towards the BJP is based on nothing
more than sheer panic. And the so-called secularists' fight
against the so-called communal forces -- the manifestation of which
is that the BJP is simply not allowed to form a government
anywhere -- is nothing more than a ruse to derive power and
influence by hijacking the people's mandate. Methinks, secularists
dread the possibility of the BJP proving itself so adequate that
it could well be rendered unshakable. For the BJP does have the
potential to put an end to vote banks and rob the others of the
com-div-fundie mantra. More significantly, the opinion-making
media (overrun by pinkos, anyway) is terrified at the prospect of
being ruled by a party which it vilified at every call.
After the last election, Mr Palkhivala (who was at great risk of
being denounced as a Hindutvawadi by our objective press) had
declared, "It is the largest party in Parliament. It has the
people's mandate... I personally favour the BJP to form a
government at the Centre." And Justice Lentin had stated, "The
people have given a verdict in favour of the BJP. It is clear that
the majority of the people want a change."
Compare that to the views of our learned Muslims: Poet Kaifi Azmi said,
"Though the BJP may have won more seats, it is the third force which received
the maximum votes." While Asghar Ali Engineer quoth, "Since the party is
based on one religion, it should not come to power. That would be against
the spirit of democracy" -- and this, despite the fact that the Muslim League
is a constituent of the UF... You see, democracy is not the mandate of the
majority -- it is only the convenience of minorities.
It's a strange state of affairs, indeed. After Ramakrishna Hegde
himself admitted that his colleagues practice caste politics in
the name of social justice, and after the undeniable drubbing
meted to the Congress, a Congress-backed UF is still touted as the
best alternative. There's not a peep from a soul when the Muslim
League wins seats in Kerala, but to admit that all classes of
Hindus voted positively for the BJP or the Sena sticks in the
secular gullet. Thus, our oh-so-law-abiding secularists feel no
prick at bending facts, quoting the percentage of voters -- which
becomes significant only when Hindutvawadis win -- and screwing
constitutional precedents to procure what *they* want for
everybody.
The message I get is: To be a Hindu in India is far worse than
being one in Saudi Arabia -- at least Islamic nations are
unambiguous about the status granted to us. But what does one do
in one's own country where the mandate of the majority is
sacrificed at the altar of minority votes? One goes rabid
aggressive, is what.
The last time around, although the BJP emerged as the single
largest party, it lost. Now with this justice-oriented plank
gifted by the evergreen Mr Kesri, I predict a more potent support
for it. As former attorney general Soli Sorabjee said to the BBC
today: "The writing on the wall is clear; the BJP is gaining in
strength and support. There's no denying that." Hear, hear.
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