[《Since it will be a political gathering, there will be plenty of
partisanship and mouthfuls  of philippics against Narendra Modi, the BJP
and the Sangh Parivar. But it would be a waste of time and resources if the
Congressmen confine themselves to abuses; it will be an even greater farce
and greater shame if the Congressmen were to engage in their familiar
weakness for sycophancy. Instead, they have to behave and speak as
responsible and reasonable keepers of the best of the constitutional
values. As those who claim to be committed to the Idea of India and who
subscribe to the Nehruvian virtues, the Congressmen have a sober and
serious task at their hands:  a democratic obligation to talk to
fellow-citizens as to how we are all mindlessly getting sucked into the
small-time viciousness of a small-time man; how as a nation and as a
society we are getting infected with pettiness and small-mindedness.  More
than that, the Congressmen need to convince the nation that they have the
legacy, the leadership, and the experience to rescue us all from this
quagmire of of petty vindictiveness being palmed off as a new normal.
...
The greatest danger we face is Narendra Modi is using all the accruements
of democracy to de-legitimise democracy’s good practices and values, and,
to turn all its bad habits to  make democratic arrangements  look
inadequate and unequal to the task of restoration of our national glory.
Those associated with national security are already muttering that
there-is-too-much-democracy claptrap. The next pit-stop in this journey
would be to look temptingly at the Xi Jinping kind of authoritarian
option.》]

http://www.tribuneindia.com/news/comment/primary-task-at-cong-plenary/551734.html

Primary task at Cong plenary
Harish Khare
Rescuing the polity from the creeping authoritarianism

Illustration by Sandeep Joshi

Harish Khare

The top Congress leaders are due to gather, in a fortnight from now, for
their party’s plenary session. Apart from consecrating Rahul Gandhi’s
election as the party president, the gathering will need to undertake far
more serious a task: they will have to perform  a duty to start a
conversation with the nation and to take the citizens into confidence on
how the entire political system is groaning under the weight of  one man —
his whims, his fancies, his attitudes and his limitations. The Congress and
its leaders need to make a case before the nation as to why the current
state of affairs is neither desirable nor acceptable. At the end of this
three-day gathering, the Congress should have given the country a good
enough reason to look beyond Narendra Modi, as and when the Lok Sabha
elections get organised.

Since it will be a political gathering, there will be plenty of
partisanship and mouthfuls  of philippics against Narendra Modi, the BJP
and the Sangh Parivar. But it would be a waste of time and resources if the
Congressmen confine themselves to abuses; it will be an even greater farce
and greater shame if the Congressmen were to engage in their familiar
weakness for sycophancy. Instead, they have to behave and speak as
responsible and reasonable keepers of the best of the constitutional
values. As those who claim to be committed to the Idea of India and who
subscribe to the Nehruvian virtues, the Congressmen have a sober and
serious task at their hands:  a democratic obligation to talk to
fellow-citizens as to how we are all mindlessly getting sucked into the
small-time viciousness of a small-time man; how as a nation and as a
society we are getting infected with pettiness and small-mindedness.  More
than that, the Congressmen need to convince the nation that they have the
legacy, the leadership, and the experience to rescue us all from this
quagmire of petty vindictiveness being palmed off as a new normal.

We remain — for now — a constitutional democracy; but, all our
constitutional arrangements stand diluted and all-out constitutional
functionaries — be it the President of India or the Union Home Minister or
External Affairs Minister —have been made to feel diminished. The Cabinet
system of government has been reduced to a joke that no longer invokes a
laugh. The country needs to be told that the fine architecture of checks
and balances is in serious jeopardy.

It is for the Congressmen to enlighten the citizens how all the key
relationships in our national scheme of things are being  revised and
reduced: first,  the majority-minority equation has been systematically
reshaped and the secular commitments stand eroded; second, the
Centre-States federal equation has tipped dangerously in favour of New
Delhi and the state governments  are being reduced to whining tots; third,
the State-Citizen balance has changed  drastically, an all-intrusive
Aadhaar arrangement is demanding compliance and surrender of privacy, and,
we are beginning to look like a misshapen  authoritarian setup; then, we
have the creeping distortions  in the Civil-Army relationship, with the
Army in danger of losing its institutional rectitude; and, lastly, the
virtual governmental takeover of the electronic media. All these key
equations  are  off the keel. And, our citizens need to be told how these
institutional distortions are unknowingly putting the nation on a road to a
totalitarian-lite experiment.

When the Opposition fails to impart a democratic vibrancy to the polity,
all other institutions of restraint — like the judiciary, the Election
Commission — too  feel discouraged; and, independent regulatory authorities
like the Reserve Bank of India feel inclined to give in to the government’s
unreasonable demands. The Congress, as the principal opposition party, has
an obligation to create conditions for robust counterpoises.

If nothing else, the country needs to be repeatedly educated about the
whimsicality that has dictated the (mis) management of the economy, and how
all the great projects — like Make in India — stand in tatters; and, more
importantly, whether the Congress has an answer to jobless growth and
whether the Congressmen can help the country find its way out of a
deepening agrarian crisis.

Notwithstanding the loud chanting of deshbhakti, and balidaan mantras, it
is the Opposition’s task to inform the country that  we stand isolated in
our own backyard because we have needlessly and arrogantly alienated all
our South Asian neighbours; and, the nation needs to be educated that India
today is less safe than it was five years ago.  The Congress has to
introduce the citizens to a new narrative that takes us away from this
excessive preoccupation with national security and an unwarranted and
unworkable flexing of muscles  at home and abroad. We are losing our
national self-assurance without making smaller nations in the neighbourhood
respect us.

Then, there is a personality overload. A personality cult may have been
“normalised” in New Delhi but it still remains a personality cult, with all
its unhealthy demands on men and institutions. It is already a matter of
considerable dismay that otherwise decent officials,   educated aides and
learned advisers  have acquiesced in the organised worship of a man who
grandiloquently pretends to know profoundly about everything, from gaming
the examinations to disrupting the economy, even without the benefit of a
Harvard education, and making a virtue of “hardwork”. From seniormost
ministers to junior joint secretary, all find themselves subscribing to
this “daddy knows best” syndrome, very much reminiscent of the Narayan Datt
Tiwari hymns to Sanjay Gandhi during the Emergency days.
History of the last hundred years has taught us one simple lesson:
personality cults do introduce undesirable imbalances in the body politic.
Personality cult produces very little democratic good; it always ends up
badly, even disastrously.

The greatest danger we face is Narendra Modi is using all the accruements
of democracy to de-legitimise democracy’s good practices and values, and,
to turn all its bad habits to  make democratic arrangements  look
inadequate and unequal to the task of restoration of our national glory.
Those associated with national security are already muttering that
there-is-too-much-democracy claptrap. The next pit-stop in this journey
would be to look temptingly at the Xi Jinping kind of authoritarian option.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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