[Spot on.
Rather terrifyingly.

《Irrespective of the turn of events in Karnataka’s politics and legislature
and whether the Supreme Court post-facto gives a nod to the swearing-in of
B.S. Yeddyurappa as chief minister or nullifies it, ***there is no longer
an iota of doubt that the BJP has any qualms in quashing constitutional
propriety, setting precedents aside and trampling on political morality at
the altar of its political ambitions. For the BJP, specially for Prime
Minister Narendra Modi and party president Amit Shah, nothing is of greater
value than achieving the long-term political objective of converting a
secular and democratic India into a Hindu State.*** [Emphasis added.] The
way the BJP government’s installation in Karnataka has been scripted must
be seen alongside occurrences of the blatant flouting of laws and
principled politics being thrown to the winds since May 2014.

The BJP and its ideological parent, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, is
little but a breeding ground of autocrats masquerading as democrats. The
BJP may yet not be able to prove its majority and be forced to make way for
H.D. Kumaraswamy to become chief minister. However, the naked use of the
state machinery and the subversion of various arms of the State intensifies
worries that have been voiced since late 2014 after the rampant targeting
of minorities and critics of the BJP became the recurrent theme. The fear
of these happenings, if unchecked, eventually developing into something
close to fascism will ring more blaringly with Mr Yeddyurappa assuming
office. Henceforth, it cannot be presumed that the BJP would respect or
honour every electoral verdict.》]

In Karnataka, see the birth of a shamocracy

Nilanjan Mukhopadhyay
(The author of 'Narendra Modi: The Man', 'The Times and Sikhs: The Untold
Agony of 1984'.)

Published May 18, 2018, 1:21 am IST
Updated May 18, 2018, 1:38 am IST

The BJP and its ideological parent, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, is
little but a breeding ground of autocrats masquerading as democrats.

B.S. Yeddyurappa takes oath as the Chief Minister of Karnataka. (Photo: ANI
| Twitter)

Irrespective of the turn of events in Karnataka’s politics and legislature
and whether the Supreme Court post-facto gives a nod to the swearing-in of
B.S. Yeddyurappa as chief minister or nullifies it, there is no longer an
iota of doubt that the BJP has any qualms in quashing constitutional
propriety, setting precedents aside and trampling on political morality at
the altar of its political ambitions. For the BJP, specially for Prime
Minister Narendra Modi and party president Amit Shah, nothing is of greater
value than achieving the long-term political objective of converting a
secular and democratic India into a Hindu State. The way the BJP
government’s installation in Karnataka has been scripted must be seen
alongside occurrences of the blatant flouting of laws and principled
politics being thrown to the winds since May 2014.

The BJP and its ideological parent, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, is
little but a breeding ground of autocrats masquerading as democrats. The
BJP may yet not be able to prove its majority and be forced to make way for
H.D. Kumaraswamy to become chief minister. However, the naked use of the
state machinery and the subversion of various arms of the State intensifies
worries that have been voiced since late 2014 after the rampant targeting
of minorities and critics of the BJP became the recurrent theme. The fear
of these happenings, if unchecked, eventually developing into something
close to fascism will ring more blaringly with Mr Yeddyurappa assuming
office. Henceforth, it cannot be presumed that the BJP would respect or
honour every electoral verdict.



The juxtaposition of Karnataka governor Vajubhai Vala’s decision with last
year’s directives of the governors of Goa and Manipur when inviting the BJP
to form governments in those states exposes the BJP’s intention of being in
saddle despite the outcome of tight elections. Only decisive mandates will
henceforth prevent the BJP from grabbing power. The governors in Goa and
Manipur justified their decisions stating that the largest post-poll
alliance was invited. But now, this privilege has been denied to the JD(S)
and Congress and Mr Vala went with the principle of the single largest
party. However, the “rider” in the Sarkaria Commission report, that the
single largest party can be invited only if it is supported by the required
number of independents, was not factored in before he took his call.
Indisputably, this is a regime which bends the same rule differently and
cites precedents from different perspectives whenever this suits its
immediate objective.

This goal became clear towards the end of the counting day when Mr Modi
walked into the BJP headquarters and declared he would not allow the
state’s development journey to be trampled upon or that the BJP would not
lag in efforts to create a “brighter future” for Karnataka. From that
moment it was evident that come what may be, the BJP would use every tool
available — legal or illegal, ethical or unethical, moral or immoral — to
form a government in the state. The tearing hurry and preconceived plan of
forming a government regardless of the outcome became evident when Mr
Yeddyurappa declared on polling day that he would take the oath on May 17,
and this is what has happened. It would be tempting to dismiss the claims
of Mr Yeddyurappa as either the rant of an overambitious politician intent
on boosting the morale of his party cadre or a feverish rush of a
superstitious leader. But his confidence has to be contextualised within
Siddaramaiah’s “open to dalit as CM” statement before the counting.
Evidently, the leaders had sensed what the media had failed to do — that
voters were not re-electing the Congress.

The BJP argued that the mandate was a rejection of the Congress and this
prompted the governor to follow the convention of inviting the single
largest party to form the government. But so was the mandate in Goa last
year a verdict against the incumbent BJP. Legal luminaries close to the BJP
have been putting forth the viewpoint that Goa’s case cannot be equated
with Karnataka because one is a small state, while the other is one of the
larger states in the country. Such logic is anti-democratic and endorses
the principle of strongmanship — that the set of rules for smaller states
will be different from those for biggest states. This is a pointer to the
political credo of the present regime and its belief in majoritarian
principles, the bigger you are, the greater shall be your powers. From a
nation that took pride in making the minorities, not just religious
communities, comfortable and secure, the BJP feeds on the majority’s
perceived hurt and sense of ignominy heaped in the past. Never has the
future of democracy appeared as critical as it is now as the checks and
balances which Indians prided as existing within the system are now being
slowly eroded block by block, institution after institution, making India
more of a shamocracy.

The Karnataka government is necessary for the BJP not just for its
dominance in the state and because it reopens a shut doorway to southern
India. The verdict is more important for the BJP’s core constituency in its
principal bastions in the north and west. People who till the other day
considered anyone from the south of the Vindhyas as Madrasis suddenly
consider Kannadigas as one of them, people who have sacrificed a lot
because of the politics of appeasement. The government in Karnataka is
important for the BJP because it provides opportunity to harness latent
Hindu sentiment. Large sections are willing to support the BJP merely
because it espouses Hindu interests and seeks to “cut down” the minorities
to their size to end their “pampering” by the “sickular” parties. The BJP
may have tried to conceal Hindutva in its campaign but Yogi Adityanath’s
deployment established once again that the BJP consistently uses
majoritarianism as a foundation in its electoral face-pack. The BJP cannot
afford Mr Yeddyurappa to fail in his trial of strength. Every inducement
will be offered in the blatant horse-trading that begins now. This will
predictably be given a patriotic veneer because India is increasingly
coming under the grip of an Indian version of neo-McCarthyism.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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