The Rediff Special/Virendra Kapoor
In today's fractured polity, the BJP alone satisfies the
craving for a stable and strong government
Sitaram Kesri must be the most hated man in
India today. Even among his peers the Congress president's rating
was running close to zero. For never before had someone caused so
much havoc in return for so little. Not long ago, both Charan
Singh and Chandra Shekhar too had wrecked duly established
governments. And for their labours they had had the consolation
of going down in history as former prime ministers. The office of
prime minister which Kesri had come to lust after at the ripe old
age of 81 will almost certainly elude him.
Indeed, he will be fortunate if he survived unscathed the political upheaval
caused by him with his wholly inexplicable letter to the
President on Easter Sunday snuffing out the life of the 10-month-
old Deve Gowda government.
The eternal backroom operator committed two cardinal sins.
He, of course, could not be blamed for developing such high
ambitions so late in his life. After all, there was no objective
criterion for achieving glory in the 112-year-old organisation.
For long power had been the preserve of members of the Nehru-
Gandhi family. After the dynasty, by a fortuitous turn of events
it had smiled on a non-leader like P V Narasimha Rao. Rao's mounting
troubles at the hands of the law resulted in the non-descript
Congress treasurer becoming the party president. Kesri was now
convinced that fate had willed him to lead the nation. He chanced
his luck and tried to become the prime minister. He failed.
In the dominant Hindu ethos anyone hankering after power is
seen to be wicked, nay, evil. This is in sharp contrast to the
upfront grab for power often witnessed in Western democracies.
Mahatma Gandhi had shunned power all his life although he was
clothed in power for as long as he lived. For most Indians, he
was the epitome of self- sacrifice. In recent days, former prime
minister V P Singh had emerged as the patron-saint of the Third
Force precisely because he had gone to great lengths to make a
show of his abnegation of power.
The wise men of the UF wanted
him to be the PM. He refused. And as a consequence refurbished
his image as a selfless leader. His exertions from the hospital
bed in the recent crisis in New Delhi too made him out to be an
extraordinary human being above the blandishments of office which
normally corrupt ordinary mortals.
Kesri's other sin was strategic. He failed to hide his
ambition behind the garb of public weal. Indira Gandhi had decimated
the well-entrenched Syndicate in 1969 by shedding copious tears
in public for the poor and the weak. The self-serving
nationalisation of 14 private banks was meant to be proof for an
unsuspecting public of her credentials as a socialist whose heart
bled for the have-nots as against Morarji Desai and Co who were
alleged to be in cahoots with the haves. Kesri suffered from a
sudden rush of blood to the head and shot off that letter to Dr
Sharma. It was only later that he looked for reasons to justify
his impulsive action.
What next? Admittedly, Kesri was desperately looking for a
face-saver. If only the wise men of the UF could elect a G K
Moopanar or even an I K Gujral as their leader, the Congress
could go back to the status quo as before March 30. In his
chastened mood, Kesri would want to put another government in
place as soon as possible. Minus him and any other Congressman.
He knows that his gamble has misfired. And he knows that he could
burn his fingers badly should the present crisis lead to a snap
poll.
Given Kesri's need for damage control and the general
aversion of most MPs for another election so soon after the one
last May, it was not beyond the genius of the present House to
find a way out of the current mess. The Congress might soon play
midwife to the birth of another UF government, with or without
the support of the Leftist groups.
However the seeds of early destruction of such a coalition
too would be present at its birth should the Congress refuse to
join it or be kept out by the UF leaders. For it is unnatural to
expect the single largest supporter of the coalition to sit out
in the cold even as minor groups rule the roast in government.
If it is recognised that India had now truly entered the coalition
mode, isn't it time honest efforts were made to craft a
government which reflected fully individual group strengths in
the House. A coalition based on a common minimum programme which
facilitated power sharing according to each constituent's
strength in Parliament will prove to be more durable than the
half way house which had crumbled like the proverbial house of
cards last Friday.
It is true that most constituents in the UF had for long
bitterly opposed the Congress. It may be that the Communists
remain allergic to support a government in which the Congress has
an active role to play. But the leaders of other centrist parties
would have to opt for one or the other major magnet in the
polity in order to wield power at the Centre and in later years
to survive electorally. Their choice was limited to the
`communal' BJP and the `corrupt' Congress. They cannot take on
both simultaneously. That would be a frustrating task. Join one,
and fight the other. But if the UF leaders still suffered from
Congress phobia they ought not to have in the first place
sought its support to form a government.
It was odd that the Congress with 144 members was treated
like a pariah by the very people who had depended on it for the
survival of their ministry. The Congress was not likely to play
the bonded slave of the UF for long. That is why an honest
Congress-UF coalition alone could break the logjam of numbers in
the 11th Lok Sabha. Unfortunately, it is unlikely to happen, at
least not in the immediate course. Kesri with his foolish and
ill-timed move had botched the chances of such a coalition.
Meanwhile, despite the blood-letting on the country's
bourses, the current phase of political instability was not
without a silver lining or two. For one, the consensus on passing
the Finance Bill underlined the welcome development that our
netas could rise above their partisan agendas in order to
protect national interest. It was also heartening that in spite
of feeling disgusted with the party chief and in spite of their
refusal to countenance a situation which pushed them into an
early election, not one Congress MP defied the party whip. This
was all the more remarkable considering that Kesri evoked
derision among the Congress rank and file and further afield in
the country at large.
There can be little doubt that another election cannot be
put off for long. Despite Deve Gowda, if there is another UF
government backed by the Congress it might last eight-ten months.
Besides, immediately it might help Kesri save his job as
Congress president. But the logic of the current three-way
division in the House dictates an early poll.
Barring the BJP, if
none is enthusiastic about it, it is mainly because various
groups which together constitute what passes for the UF cannot
hope to improve on their present strength. For instance, the DMK-
TMC combine cannot better their present tally of 37 out of 39
in Tamil Nadu, with the other two seats being held by their ally, the CPI.
Similarly, Mulayam Singh Yadav is mortified of an election at
this stage when the BSP- BJP government in UP was yet to commit a
major blunder. It is not hard to guess what is in store for the
Congress should a poll be held now.
Therefore, one believes that in the coming days before the
Lok Sabha meets to take up Chidambaram's Budget on April 21,
there shall be a serious attempt to revive the UF-Congress
arrangement at power- sharing. Modalities can be slightly
different, but the support structure will remain more or less the
same. This would suit the BJP too.
Another bout or two of
instability, and the Hindutva party would be home and dry in the
next election on the shoulders of popular disgust with the sordid
goings- on in New Delhi. In today's fractured polity, the BJP
alone satisfies more and more Indians's craving for a stable and
strong government.
Tell us what you think of this commentary
|