The Imminent Collapse of Congress : MV Kamath 


MV Kamath 

http://bigindians.blogspot.com/2008/07/imminent-collapse-of-congress-mv-kamath.html
 
Where there is no vision, says the Bible, the people perish. So, one might add, 
do parties. Would that be true of the Indian National Congress, that hoary 
organization over 120 years old that had seen the best of times and is now seen 
to be in terminal decline? For a good three quarters of a century it 
represented the voice of India, its undying hopes and suppressed fears. It was 
led by giants among men, and their name is legion. They were the ones who 
fought for freedom, made unbelievable sacrifices, courted imprisonment and 
death, because they had a vision of a free and magnificent India, an India of 
their dreams. Today it is a dream which lies shattered. The old leaders are all 
gone, the old familiar faces. In their place we have a bunch of nonentities, 
safely ensconced in their stately homes, rarely meeting fellow citizens to 
understand their problems, power-mad and money-hungry. The concept of sacrifice 
is foreign to their thinking. What can one
 possibly expect from this bunch? The party depends not on one vision, but on 
one dynasty which had pastly done its work and should have been thereafter 
relegated to deserved oblivion a long while ago. Yet it subsists, but barely. 
Gandhi, the Mahatma, once the fountainhead of wisdom, had realized as 
independence was approaching, that the time had come to disband the Congress 
which he had laboriously led for a quarter of a century and let various 
conflicting forces realign themselves. His advice was not taken. Sardar 
Vallabbhai Patel passed away on December 14, 1950. JB Kripalani, for long 
general secretary of the party, drifted away. So did C Rajagopalachari, unable 
to subscribe to Nehru’s economic theories. In the end, the Congress became the 
baby of the Nehru family. In the early years of independence, the glow of 
yesteryears persisted and sustained the party. By the time Nehru was 
approaching his end, doubts were being raised as to who would succeed
 him. There were no great stalwarts to take on the job and none had been 
groomed. In the end, as a result of the untimely end of Lal Bahadur Shastri, 
the party decided that safety lay in dynasticism. And the country has been 
paying for its folly. If the party draws any sympathy today, it is not because 
it has anything to offer, but because it has become the opium of a minuscule 
lot of leaderless people. They vote for the Congress out of habit and not out 
of conviction. Everyone knows that secularism, so-called, which the party 
craftily offers has long lost its meaning and significance. In many parts of 
the country, Muslims, whose support was sought, are drifting away from the 
Congress. So are the Dalits who have found in the corrupt but wily Mayavati a 
new messiah. Upper caste Hindus, who have for years been feeling betrayed by 
the Congress, have thrown their support to the BJP which is at least true to 
its convictions and faithful to the nation’s
 glorious past. Congressmen, having lost their moorings, have begun to drift. 
That has been noticeable in several States and in recent elections, most 
notably in Gujarat and Karnataka. Where does one go from here? There is no 
danger of India breaking up, but in State after State, the ‘‘we versus they’’ 
attitude is becoming painfully noticeable. The Congress along with the NCP 
(which is a one-man show) is in power but it has not been able to put the 
dangerously divisive Shiv Sena and its cousin Maharashtra Navnirman Sena in 
their place, which is the dustbin of history. It is almost as if the Congress 
is hand-in-glove with divisive elements in the State. In the last four years, 
the Congress has shamelessly been dependent at the Centre on a vagrant party, 
the CPI(M), which has been blackmailing its senior partner all down the line, 
to the utter confusion of the country. No one really knows where the UPA stands 
in the matter of the 123 Agreement and
 the Indo-US nuclear treaty. The Gujjar community in Rajasthan runs riot for 
over a fortnight, indulges in thoughtless violence, stops railways and road 
traffic leading to the cumulative loss in trade of crores of rupees, but Delhi 
prefers to see the BJP government in Jaipur embarrassed, when it should look at 
the entire tribal demand for inclusion in the ST category in a holistic way, 
and send in the Army to curb tribal arrogance. The party turns its face away 
from dangerous signs of meaningless regionalism. The DMK in Tamil Nadu has no 
one to question it when it pushes ahead with the Sethusamudram Project despite 
strong nationwide outrage. Chief Minister Karunanidhi insults Sri Ram by 
calling him a drunkard but no notice is taken of such lunacies. An editor of a 
very popular Marathi daily in Maharashtra has his house vandalized because he 
has the temerity to ask whether it was necessary for the Congress-led 
government to spend crores of rupees to set
 up a 309-feet statue of Chhatrapathi Shivaji Maharaj in the sea off Mumbai, 
when hundreds of Maharashtrian farmers are committing suicide because they 
cannot pay their debts. There is no word of condemnation from Sonia Gandhi. The 
DMK announces ministerial resignations from the UPA government and even names 
substitute appointments, without the Prime Minister being aware of what is 
going on within his cabinet. The PMK resorted to a hostile takeover of the All 
India Institute of Medical Sciences forcing the head to go to the Supreme Court 
for redress, which he gets. That is egg on the UPA government’s face, but it 
continues as if nothing has happened. Are we having a government in New Delhi? 
It is as if there is no government and the country is merely waiting passively 
for the next general elections to put a resurgent BJP back into power. The 
Congress accepts every slap on its face as if that is due and acceptable award 
for being senile. The blatant
 case of favouritism in which the Union Shipping and Surface Transport Minister 
T Baalu indulged in, goes unpunished. It is as if not crime, not blatant 
arrogance on the part of coalition partners, not even failures in the three Lok 
Sabha by-elections in Thane (Maharashtra), Tura (Meghalaya) and Hamirpur 
(Himachal Pradesh) matter any longer. The grave has been dug for the Congress. 
It is apparently only a matter of time before it is formally laid in it for 
eternity. That is a sad end for a political party which at one time gave us 
gems of purest rays serene. The only consolation is that a freshly revitalized 
Bharatiya Janata Party is around with a sense of mission and the right leaders 
to work towards its fulfilment. India that is Bharat will never die. But the 
Congress will. In its demise that so many are so determinedly predicting, there 
is perhaps hope that a new party such as the one Gandhi had in mind will rise 
from its ashes. What we are witnessing
 is darkness before dawn. Luckily the waiting period is not going to be too 
long. The general elections should be held in November; prolongation by even a 
month will damage the Congress more than it thinks, with inflation rising 
menacingly week after week. That is a sign of things to come. source: sentinel 
assam
 
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