Rajdeep Sardesai: No PM is an island
http://ibnlive.in.com/blogs/rajdeepsardesai/1/62238/rajdeep-sardesai-no-pm-is-an-island.html
If this is the age of television news, then Dr Manmohan Singh clearly belongs 
to another era. During the 1998 elections, we were doing a news programme on a 
day in the life of the economist-politician. It was his first electoral battle 
and the reticent academic in him was clearly troubled by the intrusive nature 
of the camera. Already tired of being jostled by Congress workers on the 
campaign trail, he appeared reluctant to come out of his shell. Finally, late 
in the afternoon, we learnt that it was Dr Singh's grand-daughter's birthday 
and a small party was being organised in the garden. Could we film it, we 
wondered, sensing a chance to show Dr Singh the family man to the wider world. 
No cameras, this is a private moment, was the cryptic answer.'Privacy' in the 
24x7 news whirl may seem incongruous for someone in public life. A Laloo Prasad 
Yadav will take you to his cowshed, even brush his teeth in front of the 
camera, and an Obama family holiday will
 be splashed across the front pages, but Manmohan guards his personal space 
zealously. Last year, we managed to get the prime minister to do a Children's 
Day special with his wife Gursharan Kaur on the lawns of 7 Race Course Road. 
The feisty lady broke into a song at one stage, the best the prime minister 
could manage in response was a weak smile, barely visible under the grey 
beard.It should come as no surprise then that the prime minister hasn't really 
done a single detailed interview in almost seven years in power. In his first 
term, he did two major press conferences at Vigyan Bhavan and then stopped them 
altogether. He did another one last year, but then again retreated behind the 
forbidding walls of government. Which is why the sudden decision to hold a 
'live' television interaction with editors from the electronic media appeared 
out of character. What made it even more mysterious was just why Manmohan had 
chosen this moment to finally speak out.
 With the budget session of Parliament just days away and a series of scams 
having tarnished the government's record, what really was the message the prime 
minister wished to send out?Days later, one is, frankly, none the wiser. If the 
prime minister wanted to use the platform to suggest that he was firmly in 
charge, then his responses only seemed to confirm a sense of growing 
helplessness at being almost encircled by a group of rogues. If he was hoping 
for sympathy for being a 'victim' of coalition pressures, then he seemed to 
forget that 'victimhood' is often synonymous with weakness. If he was confident 
that his personal integrity would carry the day, he ran the risk of being 
accused of avoiding any individual responsibility for the acts of his 
colleagues.If he had considered a mea culpa, the closest he came to doing so 
was that "irregularities" were his biggest regret, but he wasn't as 'guilty' as 
some suggested. And if he was hoping that the media
 would be an 'ally' in reporting an India story beyond scams and "negativism", 
he failed to realise that journalism cannot be a lapdog of political authority 
either.Okay, so the prime minister did tell us that he wasn't a "quitter", that 
there were still many unfinished tasks. So, he did promise us that his 
government was "dead serious" about punishing wrong-doers. But somehow Manmohan 
doesn't fit the image of a Schwarznegger-like Terminator. Moreover, 
middle-class cynicism can be infectious: the very same social groups that were 
praising the PM's honesty now see him as a Dhritarashtra-like figure who 
"tolerates" corruption.Ironically, it is this very middle class that the PM 
must reach out to once again by using TV more, not less. His soft, almost 
inaudible voice may seem boring in the cacophony of the modern-day news 
juggernaut. But being telegenic is not just about clever soundbites and 
powerful oratory. There is space even in today's age of political
 'spin' for old-fashioned values of decency, simplicity and 
straightforwardness, values he still embodies.But to express them in moments of 
crisis, he needs to first unshackle himself from his inherent nervousness in 
facing the camera. He needs to talk to the Indian people more often, become our 
moral compass in these times of all-round venality. His prolonged periods of 
silence are seen as a sign of timidity, of a diffident leader lacking in 
political authority as a result of never having won a Lok Sabha election.Maybe 
at age 78, it's too late for Manmohan to transform himself from the 
self-effacing bureaucrat-politician to an effective mass communicator. Maybe, 
he will always be the Humphrey Appleby of government, a civil servant first, a 
neta only later. Which is also perhaps why he needs Sonia Gandhi's help now 
more than ever. He has at least spoken, when will Sonia break her sphinx-like 
silence?(The writer is Editor-in-Chief, CNN-IBN, IBN-7 and IBN
 Lokmat)


      
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