[The assertion that Narendra Modi is "Indira Gandhi on steroids" while
superficially looks pretty apt, it sadly misses the vital essence.

Indira was obsessed with being in power.
Thus the Emergency had been imposed to scuttle the swelling waves of
challenge.
The moment she perceived, rather inaccurately as only the subsequent
developments would demonstrate, she went back to "democracy" - very much on
her own.
Like her obsession with power, that was also an element of her natural
instincts - the yearning to be counted as a "democratic" leader.

With Modi, things are very significantly different.
Of course he is also obsessed about being in power.
He - in the process, as it appears, has, inter alia, successfully rewritten
the (traditional) power balance between the BJP/himself and the RSS, in his
own favour.
But, the story goes well beyond that.

He is doggedly pursuing an agenda of transforming the "secular"
"democratic" Indian state into a "Hindu Rashtra", which will be, regardless
of other attributes, stripped of all vestiges of any substantive democracy
and pluralism.
On a permanent basis.

In this scheme, there is simply no return to any meaningful "democracy",
even with no visible challenge.
And, it is not limited to just Modi.
He is the (leading) standard-bearer of an entrenched ideological-political
tradition.]

https://www.ndtv.com/opinion/why-i-believe-modi-is-indira-gandhi-on-steroids-by-ramachandra-guha-2262369?fbclid=IwAR2bTLoZ7ayMUxk_3AZ2lE4TdDzN9TYeKlAkO5PCCbNOVG5EZD7hp4LPXs8

The Gutting Of Indian Democracy By Modi-Shah

Ramachandra Guha

Updated: July 14, 2020 05:12 pm IST

Back in December 2015, I wrote that India was in danger of becoming what I
termed an 'election-only democracy'. Once a party had won an election, and
formed a government, its leader(s) behaved as if they were totally immune
from critical scrutiny, and could do absolutely what they wished for the
next five years, when the next election was to be held.

In a proper democracy, a democracy worth the name, the authoritarian
tendencies of leaders elected to public office are kept in check by such
institutions as a functioning parliament, a free press, an independent
civil service, and an independent judiciary. That is how democracy
functions in much of Western Europe and North America, and that is how the
framers of our constitution hoped our democracy would function too.

And so it largely did, for the first two decades after Independence. In her
early years as Prime Minister, Indira Gandhi followed her predecessors
Jawaharlal Nehru and Lal Bahadur Shastri in regularly attending debates in
parliament; in keeping the civil service and judiciary free from political
interference; and in not seeking to intimidate the press. But after she
split the Congress in 1969, her attitude to these things changed. She began
promoting a 'committed' judiciary and a 'committed' bureaucracy,
disregarding the importance of parliament, and threatening newspaper
proprietors and editors. She also destroyed inner-party democracy within
the Congress Party; making it a one-person (and in time, a one-family) show.

It is important to recognize that this emasculation of independent
institutions by Prime Minister Indira Gandhi had been underway for several
years before the Emergency. Between June 1975 and March 1977, Indian
democracy was officially dead, to be miraculously resurrected by Indira
Gandhi's still unexplained decision to call the elections which she and her
party lost. After 1977, the institutions of democracy that Indira Gandhi
had tamed began to reassert their independence. This was particularly true
of the press; as documented by Robin Jeffrey in his book India's Newspaper
Revolution, newspapers and magazines in English and especially in Indian
languages were now far braver than ever before, running well-researched
exposes of the crimes of politicians of all parties. Equally significant
was the restoration of judicial autonomy, and of the Supreme Court in
particular. Meanwhile, debates in parliament in the 1980s and 1990s were
almost as vigorous as they had been in the 1950s. The one institution which
did not regain its independence was the bureaucracy, with postings and
transfers of officers now determined as often by proximity to ruling
politicians as by professional competence.

This recovery of institutional independence was partial and incomplete;
nonetheless, it made many observers (this writer included) hopeful that
democracy in India was at least half-way towards fulfilling the hopes of
the Republic's founders. But then came the elections of 2014, and the
coming to power of a Prime Minister who, in terms of his political style,
is best described as Indira Gandhi on steroids. For, as his years as Chief
Minister of Gujarat had already demonstrated, Narendra Modi was even more
suspicious of institutional independence than Mrs Gandhi; and even more
determined to crush it. Like her, he sought to tame and intimidate the
press; to set investigative agencies on his political rivals and opponents;
and to emasculate the judiciary. He cast his baleful shadow even on
institutions previously regarded as immune from political interference,
such as the Army, the Reserve Bank of India, and the Election Commission.
He wished to control them too. And, at least to some extent, he has
succeeded.

In his bid to impose his absolute authority on his party, his government,
and his nation, Narendra Modi has had one key ally-his long-time associate
from Gujarat, Amit Shah. First as Party President and now as Home Minister,
Shah has played an indispensable and devilishly effective role in neutering
democratic opposition outside the government. And in bending to the Prime
Minister and the ruling party's will, autonomous institutions within the
government itself.

It was after observing the Modi-Shah jugalbandhi in operation at the centre
for a year-and-a-half that, in December 2015, I had characterized India as
an 'election-only democracy'. Alas, it is time to revise that judgement,
and to downgrade our democracy further still. We have now arrived at a
stage in our history as an independent nation when even elections are
coming to matter less and less.

Earlier this week, there were tax raids ordered by the central government
on close aides of the Chief Minister of Rajasthan, Ashok Gehlot. These were
timed to coincide with the courting by the BJP of his disgruntled deputy,
Sachin Pilot, in an attempt to topple the Congress government in the state.
That bid appers to have temporarily failed; but that, in the middle of a
pandemic, the attempt was made in the first place shows the contempt in
which the Modi-Shah regime hold the values and procedures of constitutional
democracy.

The happenings in Rajasthan are merely a replay of what happened in Madhya
Pradesh in March, and what happened in Karnataka last year. In each of
these states, after elections were held, a government that was not led by
the BJP came to power-a Congress government in Madhya Pradesh and
Rajasthan, and a JD(S)-Congress coalition government in Karnataka. Seeking
to overturn the verdict of the voters, in each state, the BJP sought to
induce legislators of the parties in power to defect or resign their seats,
so that their party could come to form the government instead.

In Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, and now Rajasthan, the BJP has sought, by
wholly immoral and undemocratic means, to change the result of an election
that went against it. But the dirty tricks of the ruling party in this
regard are by no means restricted to these three states. In Goa and
Manipur, it was not love of Narendra Modi or devotion to Hindutva that
encouraged MLAs who were independents or from smaller parties to hitch
their wagon to the BJP-it was something more material, more fungible.
Likewise, the rash of Congress MLAs resigning before a Rajya Sabha election
in Gujarat (and some other states) is not entirely unconnected to the deep
pockets of the ruling party.

Estimates of how much money was offered to these legislators to defect
vary. The Rajasthan Chief Minister, Ashok Gehlot, has claimed that Congress
MLAs are being offered Rs 25 crores each to join the BJP. Journalists I
have spoken to think that these estimates are broadly accurate. One
presumes that the figures for Madhya Pradesh and Karnataka are comparable.
The sums of money changing hands are staggering indeed. Where does it all
come from? From the dodgy electoral bonds that the Supreme Court has
regrettably failed to examine? Or from even shadier sources?

These transactions raise a more fundamental question still-if legislators
can be bought and sold at any time, what is the purpose of holding
elections in the first place? Does not this nullify entirely the democratic
will of the millions of Indians who voted in the Assembly elections in
these states? If the money power of the BJP can so effectively override the
outcome of a supposedly free and fair election, can India even call itself
an 'election-only' democracy?

I have spoken of Narendra Modi as being Indira Gandhi on steroids. By this
I mean that he is both more subtle as well as more ruthless. Indira used,
as it were, a blunt khurpi to undermine institutions; Modi uses a sharp
sword. She had second thoughts about some of her actions, the Emergency
notably, whereas remorse and guilt are absolutely foreign to his nature.
Besides, for all her other faults, Indira had a deep commitment to
religious pluralism. On the other hand, Modi is authoritarian as well as
majoritarian.

The institutions and ethos of Indian democracy were badly damaged by Indira
Gandhi's years in power. They eventually recovered, slowly and haltingly.
Even if it fell short of the ideals of our Constitution-makers, the India
of (roughly) 1989 to 2014 was still recognizably a democracy, albeit a
flawed and imperfect one. Whether the institutions and ethos of Indian
democracy can ever recover from Narendra Modi's years in power is an open
question.

(Ramachandra Guha is a historian based in Bengaluru. His books include
'Environmentalism: A Global History' and 'Gandhi: The Years that Changed
the World'.)
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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