By Swapan Dasgupta
There were many battles that were simultaneously
being fought in Uttar Pradesh over the past three months. The first was in the
constituencies between candidates for the privilege of becoming a Member of the
Legislative Assembly. The second was between political parties over the right
to form a government in Lucknow. The third was a battle between different
claimants to the post of Chief Minister. Yet, for a large part of the outside
world, it was the fourth contest that caught the imagination: an unstated battle
royal between the heirs of two political dynasties.
Last Tuesday, as the Samajwadi Party coasted to a
convincing victory, recording the best performance by any political party since
1985, the unanimous verdict was that Akhilesh Yadav, son of Mulayam Singh
Yadav, had easily trounced the heir apparent of the Nehru-Gandhi family. An
impressionable (and, often, craftily gullible) media that had been detecting
pro-Congress undercurrents in chai shop talks were quick to change their tune
and proclaim Akhilesh as the more authentic representative of the emerging
young India.
Rahul Gandhi, whose energetic campaigning had
mesmerised the babalogs, and who was confidently predicted to secure at least
100 seats for the Congress was, for the moment, discarded in embarrassment.
Sundry anchors and pundits who till the other day were ready to proclaim that
India needed a break from the wooden style of the good Manmohan Singh suddenly
discovered a hidden streak of insolence when interrogating dejected Congress
stalwarts who, in turn, tried to balance political realities with craven
dynastic loyalty. The Establishment of India revelled as the first family
squirmed with embarrassment at the near-zero returns from a high investment
scheme.
It is fair to say that had the shoe been on the
other foot, the reactions would have been more subdued. Metropolitan arrogance
would have compared a Rahul triumph over Akhilesh as natural and almost
pre-ordained—akin to, say, India beating Zimbabwe in cricket. Falling back on
defensive condescension, the suave Congress General Secretary Digvijay Singh
told CNN-IBN in all seriousness that Rahul, having a ‘national perspective’
could not be put on par with a ‘regional leader’ such as Akhilesh. Each had
their place and when it came to the nation in its entirety, the likes of
Akhilesh and for that matter Naveen Patnaik were to be found wanting. The
implication was obvious: Rahul must rule India and the Yadav, Badal and Patnaik
families should confine themselves to the states.
The point is not that Digvijay Singh was falling
back on a disingenuous argument to firewall Rahul. It is my feeling that he was
being deadly serious in his assertion. He didn’t mean to be offensive. He
sincerely believed that the governance of the nation and the fortunes of the
Gandhi were inextricably linked. One couldn’t do without the other.
What was put to test in UP in the just-concluded
Assembly election was two very different mentalities. The Congress and, for
that matter, a section of the BJP, are puzzled by the growing clout of the
regional parties. They are unable to comprehend why an UP which, till just 15
years ago, imagined itself to be synonymous with the nation has now voluntarily
chosen to be relegated to the level of the states.
To believe that India’s largest state has suddenly
become narrow minded is to be unmindful of a very different phenomenon: the
enlargement of the idea of India. The past three decades has witnessed a
greater integration of India. There is now far greater mobility of population
than at any point in India’s history; the insularity of village India has been
shattered by better communications, access to the media and the emergence of a
national market. Delhi may still be a long way from the district headquarters
but it is less distant than it was 30 years ago. From Bollywood and cricket to
terrorism, there are many more national concerns to the 25-year-old youth than
confronted his grandfather.
By this logic India should also start behaving
politically more like one nation and less like 25 different nations under one
flag and Constitution. Yet, and this is the paradox, the political behaviour of
the nation was far more composite when Indira Gandhi was at the helm than when
Rahul Gandhi is trying to find his feet. Today’s political India speaks in a
multitude of voices.
The explanation for this phenomenon is best left to
the scholars. In understanding politics, however, what is important is the
recognition that the one-size-fits-all approach is no longer inapplicable. The
mega welfare schemes promoted by Sonia Gandhi and the do-gooder National
Advisory Council have floundered precisely because they can’t fit Punjab,
Bihar, Gujarat and UP simultaneously. Yet, this is precisely the point that is
insufficiently appreciated by the Planning Commission, the pan-Indian
cosmopolitan elite and, most important, the Congress’ first family refuse to
comprehend. They are still stuck in the centralised legacy of the Nehru order.
More to the point, this political pan-Indianism is convenient and an
alternative to activism that is rooted in the regional ethos.
Deccan Chronicle/ Asian Age, March 8, 2012
2 comments:
A very thoughtful piece. Multitude of voices and yet multiple common causes for a nation. Reconciling the two automatically leads to the answer of much greater, substantive and substantial federalism. Not just from Delhi but from State capitals to District HQs and from there to Corporations, Municpalities and Panchayats. The local government and governance revolution has hardly gotten off the blocks. It requires not just funds and financial autonomy but provision of intellectual competence, administrative skills and experience. Nothing short of a total governance and devolution required. Swapan has flagged it well.
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