By Swapan Dasgupta
The paralysis of governance that began in August
2010 with the scandals associated with the organisation of the Commonwealth
Games has lasted for over two years and is showing absolutely no sign of
easing. On the contrary, with all the economic indices showing southward
inclines, a crisis that was hitherto confined to the ruling United Progressive
Alliance has spread to other sectors of national life resulting in national
despondency and cynicism. The much-trumpeted ‘India story’ that aroused
enormous expectations throughout the world appears to have run out of steam, if
not derailed.
In parliamentary democracies, the time-tested method
of breaking a big political deadlock is through a fresh election. Ironically,
returning to the people in the next months for a fresh mandate does not appear
to be on the agenda of either the Government or the Opposition. With successive
opinion polls suggesting that a snap election will produce a horribly fractured
Lok Sabha, the consensus in the Indian Establishment is that it is preferable
to persist with a Prime Minister who appears to have de-facto abdicated until
May 2014. The intervening 16 months, it is being hoped, will result in greater
clarity over the shape of the alternative.
Of course, these calculations are premised on the fragile
belief that the brinkmanship that is certain to be a recurring feature of day-to-day
politics does not lead to unintended consequences. The Government, it is
understood, is on shaky ground and could find itself deprived of its majority
abruptly.
In times like this when an incumbent regime is
waiting passively for the guillotine to fall, the temptation among
stake-holders is to put their weight behind an alternative. After the election
of 2009 it was widely believed that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s second term
would be followed by a smooth transition of power to Rahul Gandhi. Indeed, the
efforts of the Congress in the period immediately following the 2009 general
election was to regain its hold in the Hindi heartland and reduce the party’s
future dependence on coalition partners. However, this attempt to restore
Congress dominance at an all-India level has faltered horribly and Rahul has
compounded the problem by being perceived to be lacking in application and
seriousness.
A similar situation had confronted India in 1996. At
that time, Atal Behari Vajpayee was the beneficiary of a quiet process of
realignment during the two choppy years of the United Front Government led by
H.D. Deve Gowda and I.K. Gujral. A BJP which was regarded as a pariah in 1992
at the time of the Ayodhya demolition, and failed to secure any worthwhile
support in 1996 (during Vajpayee’s 13-day Government), was suddenly blessed
with a multitude of regional party support in 1998.
There is a feeling in some circles that the coming
months could witness a growing momentum in favour of Narendra Modi. Since 2009,
Modi has emerged as the favourite son of BJP-inclined voters. In terms of
popularity, he has eclipsed all other BJP notables. Opinion polls suggest that
the Gujarat Chief Minister has broadened his appeal considerably to embrace a
vast section of urban India, the middle classes and the youth. Today, Modi’s
appeal is far wider than the support for the BJP, a development that both
excites the rank and file of his party and leaves a section of its leadership
deeply worried.
Whether or not Modi becomes the face of the
anti-Congress mobilisation for the next general election will, of course,
depend substantially on how he performs in the Gujarat Assembly polls scheduled
for later this year. If he wins conclusively, it is going to be virtually
impossible for Modi-sceptics in the BJP to resist the groundswell from below.
It is interesting to note that those outside the BJP
who are inimical to Modi being projected as a prime ministerial candidate
believe that his rise is unstoppable. Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar has
issued enough public warnings to the effect that he will not remain in the
National Democratic Alliance in the event of the BJP endorsing Modi. At the
same time, Nitish seems to simultaneously believe that the BJP leadership will
not be able to stop Modi’s rise to the top. As such, he has already begun preparations
for life outside the NDA.
The simplistic view is that Nitish is too committed
to ‘secular’ politics to even contemplate cohabitation with a Modi-led BJP. No
doubt, Nitish has compulsions similar to Mamata Banerjee. In both West Bengal
and Bihar, Muslims account for more than a quarter of the electorate, and there
is a political price to be paid by parties who are seen to be supportive of
Modi.
For Nitish, however, there is an added dimension to
his anti-Modi politics. The Janata Dal (United) in Bihar appears to have
concluded that a go-it-alone strategy in today’s environment would witness
interesting shifts. It is likely that the BJP will wean away the bulk of the
upper castes and a smattering of backward castes from the main regional party.
However, this would be more than compensated by a general collapse of the votes
which earlier went to Lalu Yadav’s Rashtriya Janata Dal and the Congress. Nitish,
in short, expects to recreate the social alliance that kept Lalu in power for
15 years.
An interesting facet of the calculations that are
driving Nitish Kumar is the belief that by the time of the next general
election, the Congress will be too discredited and demoralised to put up a worthwhile
fight anywhere in India. The Bihar Chief Minister believes that the real
challenger will be a Modi-led BJP. There is enough anecdotal evidence to
suggest that Modi’s presence will galvanise the BJP throughout the Hindi
heartland, not least in Uttar Pradesh.
Confronting Modi on the issue of ‘secularism’
alliance is not something that appeals to his political opponents. This is
because the Gujarat leader is certain to make ‘development’ his one and only
plank and allow identity politics to play a subliminal role. Instead, what
could happen is a Nitish-led initiative to forge an alliance of ‘backward’
states, particularly in eastern India. Together, such a bloc has the ability to
win nearly 75 seats in the next election.
In the next few months, Nitish is planning a series
of programmes centred on the demand for greater accommodation by the Centre to
backward states. Whereas, Modi has been proclaiming the virtues of the ‘Gujarat
model’ based on creating an environment for entrepreneurship to flower, Nitish
will be highlighting the need for regional equity complemented by good
governance.
At one level, these competing visions may suggest an
India-Bharat tussle involving the role of the state in the development process.
One will highlight the state as a supporting plank for a rule-based,
transparent market economy. The other will revive the call for a redistributive
Centre to facilitate lowering of regional disparities.
However, there is a point at which both the Gujarat
and Bihar experiences converge: the question of federalism. From different
positions, both Modi and Nitish are asking for a fundamental review of
Centre-state relations and the role of the Planning Commission in the country’s
economic life. Whereas Modi would want the statutory, non-discretionary
transfers to the states by the Finance Commission to become larger, Nitish
would insist on a larger equalisation principle to confront backwardness. And
both would be united on two points. First, that the planning process devolve to
the states; and, second, that the size and scope of the Central Government be
reduced.
The Telegraph, September 14, 2012
1 comment:
Nitish is a visionary.. He is thinking about how to make JD(U)stronger in future and come to power on its own without the support of BJP.
Only thing that worries me is that why BJP does not think on similar lines.
Has it done anything worthwhile in the last 7 years to make its presence felt in the states of AP, Tamilnadu, Kerala. If we include West Bengal to the above list,BJP would not have won more than 3 out of 140 seats.. How can you dream of coming to power when you score nothing out of 25% seats.
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