"..I came to India to offer my solidarity to independent candidate
Mallika Sarabhai, who had dared to challenge the politics of BJP and
its leader L.K. Advani, in the Gandhinagar constituency of Gujarat.
The past four weeks on the ground have given me a unique opportunity
to observe at close hand the world’s largest democracy at work, with
all of its imperfections. The role of big money, despite the supposed
campaign spending limitations; the inability to stop criminals from
entering elected offices; and the appeal to the voters’ baser
instincts on caste and religious grounds, are particularly shameful.
And the spectacle of winning parties haggling for ‘lucrative’
ministerial berths, to say the least, is disheartening. Yet, I leave
with deep respect and admiration for the electoral system as a whole,
particularly the role of the Election Commission, which has ensured in
recent years that the world’s largest electorate can cast their
ballots in a reasonably free and fair manner.

Mallika lost her personal battle with Advani, but her point had been
made: The Indian voters had stepped up to the plate to decisively
defeat the Prime Ministerial ambitions of a man who had spear-headed
the BJP’s politics of hate and division."


India Polls: What A Difference A Day Made!

By Raju Rajagopal

22 May, 2009
Countercurrents.org

“Is the sun setting over the Rising Sun?” I had wondered in the days
leading up to the elections in Tamilnadu. Pollsters were certain that
the ruling DMK party (the Rising Sun sign) would be swept out of most
parliamentary constituencies. The Congress party’s Jai Ho slogan had
momentarily turned into Jaya Ho, as the media anointed AIDMK’s
Jayalalitha as the most likely king-maker in Delhi, in anticipation of
a fractured national verdict.

As the nation anxiously awaited the final vote count, hubris was in
the air, as pre-conditions for supporting the new government came fast
and furious from potential coalition partners. The President had
summoned a panel of constitutional experts to guide her in the
anticipated complexity of government formation. The market was
palpably nervous – “It’s rooting for the NDA,” an entrepreneur friend
opined.

But it took a mere three hours on the morning of May 16th, the day of
reckoning, to prove all the poll pundits wrong! By the end of the day,
the Left had been ‘left behind’ in Kerala and West Bengal. The Fourth
Front was ‘all out’ for a mere 28. Mayawati’s mystique seemed to have
evaporated into thin U.P. air. The DMK’s muscle and money power, and
some say Jayalalitha’s last minute bluster on Sri Lanka, had left the
AIDMK and its new allies in the dust. Congress had made a clean sweep
of Andhra Pradesh. And Advani’s “UPA is soft on terror” mantra
appeared to have failed miserably with the voters of Maharashtra.

In short, the Indian electorate had completely rewritten the rules of
the game by resoundingly endorsing the UPA government and voting for
stability. It had rudely snatched the ‘PM crown’ away from would-be
king-makers.

“Congress, Left, Right and Center,” “Singh is King,” screamed the
headlines on the following day. The ‘pound of flesh’ that some of the
potential allies were hoping to extract suddenly turned into meek
statements of ‘unconditional support.’ And on Monday morning the stock
market went berserk (+ 17%) at the prospect of a ‘second inning’ for
the UPA, sans the Left. Trading was halted twice as Sensex set record
gains, proving once again that India, Inc. is always on the winning
side…especially after the fact!


Those left behind tried to put on a brave face at first and talked of
collective responsibility for their unexpected debacle. But the
bravado melted away quickly as the knives were out and the blame game
began. Somnath Chatterjee fired the first salvo at Prakash Karat of
the CPI (M) and criticized the Left’s immaturity. “Red Card for Karat”
cried one headline. Sandhya Jain of the Pioneer newspaper, a pro-RSS
columnist, put the blame squarely on Advani for the BJP’s rout,
accusing him of lacking vision and presence, and of not firmly
distancing himself from Varun Gandhi. A visibly agitated Tarun Vijay
of the Organizer (the RSS mouthpiece), on the other hand, was clear
that BJP had lost because it had strayed away from its Hindutva roots.
Mayawati smelled a Congress-SP conspiracy to do her in. And
Jayalalitha alone held the Election Commission responsible for her
poor showing -- the same commission, incidentally, whose work AIDMK
cadres had tried to hinder some years back during T.N. Seshan’s
leadership.

Turmoil in the NDA camp soon spilled over into the public arena, as
Advani announced that he wasn’t inclined to lead the opposition (a
stance he subsequently changed under pressure). Murli Manohar Joshi,
an open challenger for the job, uncharacteristically blamed the BJP
for forsaking Muslim votes in U.P. by not allocating more seats to
Muslim candidates. NDA ally Sharad Yadav was blunter: He blamed BJP’s
support for Varun Gandhi and its last minute attempts to project Modi
as a future PM. Modi, who had enthusiastically campaigned outside his
state and had rushed to Delhi several times to offer his advice. Modi
now tried to distance himself from the fiasco. (Perhaps, he had never
personally claimed to be a PM-in-waiting, but he had certainly seemed
to play along with the Modi-for-PM chorus during the last days of the
Gujarat campaign, as evidenced by BJP campaign ads repeatedly
featuring only his face, ignoring Advani, the real contestant!)

Post-Poll pundits are now busy analyzing the momentous verdict: Was it
an endorsement of Manmohan Singh, or was it merely an aggregation of
state results? Was it the youth factor and Rahul Gandhi’s magic? Were
the voters turned off by the unrelenting negative campaign of the BJP
and Advani’s unseemly attacks on the PM? Was it really a vote for
secularism?

Noted political analyst Yogendra Yadav observes: “A positive image of
the Prime Minister and the Congress president definitely helped. Many
of the major pro-people initiatives…such as the NREGA, the farm loan
waiver, and the Right to Information Act…did create a positive
climate…. It also helped that the party did not become overconfident
and did not resort to an ‘India Shining’ kind of campaign. The
Congress appeared more responsible, more future-oriented and more
pro-people than its opponents.”

Yadav and other analysts were cautious in not over-playing the verdict
as a ‘mandate for secularism,’ even though there was a strong case to
me made on that account. Better so, given that the UPA government had
failed in its ‘first inning’ to take on communal forces and had itself
repeatedly resorted to ‘soft Hindutva’; and in every place where the
Sangh Parivar had chosen to play the communal card -- Mangalore,
Bangalore, Kandhamal, Philbhit etc. – the BJP seemed to have gained
ground. Varun Gandhi’s victory, despite near-universal condemnation of
his hate rhetoric, was a rude reminder that the real mandate for
secularism can only come when the voters themselves resoundingly
reject a candidate who blatantly resorts to caste/communal incitement
to gain votes.

India, Inc., on the other hand, had no hesitation in over-playing the
verdict as a mandate for speeding up economic liberalization. There
have already been widespread calls for fast-tracking ‘reforms’ in the
banking/insurance sector, which had been abandoned after the Left had
flexed its muscles last time. As Yadav cautions, “[Congress] could
succumb to the temptation to go in for unbridled economic reforms, now
that there is no Left to check it. If the Congress is serious about
its future, the party needs to invent a new Left within it. The party
does not need a new ideology: it just needs to take its own election
manifesto seriously.”

I came to India to offer my solidarity to independent candidate
Mallika Sarabhai, who had dared to challenge the politics of BJP and
its leader L.K. Advani, in the Gandhinagar constituency of Gujarat.
The past four weeks on the ground have given me a unique opportunity
to observe at close hand the world’s largest democracy at work, with
all of its imperfections. The role of big money, despite the supposed
campaign spending limitations; the inability to stop criminals from
entering elected offices; and the appeal to the voters’ baser
instincts on caste and religious grounds, are particularly shameful.
And the spectacle of winning parties haggling for ‘lucrative’
ministerial berths, to say the least, is disheartening. Yet, I leave
with deep respect and admiration for the electoral system as a whole,
particularly the role of the Election Commission, which has ensured in
recent years that the world’s largest electorate can cast their
ballots in a reasonably free and fair manner.

Mallika lost her personal battle with Advani, but her point had been
made: The Indian voters had stepped up to the plate to decisively
defeat the Prime Ministerial ambitions of a man who had spear-headed
the BJP’s politics of hate and division.


--
http://venukm.blogspot.com/

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