A year has passed by since
Narendra Modi commanded historic majority to come to power in New Delhi. In the year gone, he took ‘baby
steps’ to translate his dreams and promises to people to transform India –
socially and economically.
His economic
template is no more different than what Manmohan Singh and his man – P
Chidambaram – had pursued. In two full Budgets that his government has
presented so far, Modi has not yet unveiled a single step, which could bring in
fundamental change to the fate of the country. At best he has been an
undisputed king of marketing and sales to re-package schemes and policies
pursued by his immediate predecessor to give them the energy and direction
which they had lacked.
The book is titled – The
enabler Narendra Modi. The reason for such a title is that Modi has given
sufficient hints in his one year in office that he is no admirer of India being a
welfare state. He has sought to nudge India onto an enabling path. For
decades, India
stood firm as a welfare state and billions of dollars were poured in hundred of
welfare schemes.
But India’s
welfare template suffered from innumerable holes, which defeated the very idea
of such schemes, as a class pocketed the wealth meant for the poor of the
country. Modi believes as seen in his actions that people need to stand on
their feet and they should be provided with enabling platform to transform
their lives socially and economically.
In the chapter, Herd Breaker, this book reminds the
ruling party led by Modi of reasons why the people broke free of several
political stereotypes to give a mandate not seen for two and a half decades.
Millions of people living on the margins defied the caste identities to back
the BJP in the 2014 Lok Sabha elections. Such people are dreamy and have a
habit not to give long rope to the ruling party to fulfill the promises. Modi
has unveiled a few of the steps to address to the aspiration of such people,
but they seem too futuristic to give immediate tangible benefits to his
admirers on the ground.
This book also has a
chapter, New Delhi Caucus, wherein
Modi’s most difficult challenge is listed and detailed. India is a vast country
but irony of the country has been the clout of the ‘New Delhi Caucus’
consisting of bureaucrats, political class, middle men, civil society and
judicial activists, which has subverted dreams of teeming millions. Modi has
steadfastly gone after the Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) since assuming
office and has also sought to correct the ways the judiciary functions in the
country. But he has not weeded out the ‘New Delhi Caucus’ completely, which
risks his government becoming no different than his predecessors.
Political opponents of Modi
privately admit that he is perched as emperor of Indian democracy. They argue
that by all accounts, Modi has surpassed the stature of Indira Gandhi of 1971
when she was India's
most powerful leader and had unveiled a single party rule in the country.
Modi's position is both ominous and providential. His position could be ominous,
because he may throttle dissent and cause serious damage to Indian democracy.
At the same time it could also be providential, because he can guide India onto a
new path and liberate shackled potential of the country.
Politically speaking Modi
is India's
first non-Congress Prime Minister. It may sound odd, because there were seven
Prime Ministers, who headed non-Congress governments. Even Atal Bihari Vajpayee
of BJP was Prime Minister for about six years. Yet, Modi is the first non-Congress
Prime Minister in the true sense.
It must be noted that Congress
in India
is not just a political party, but a political culture. And that culture was
seeded deep into Indian democracy by Indira Gandhi. Her stature was such in her
prime time that she ensured Constitution Amendment (42nd) to give India the
character of a welfare state. All her successors bore her imprints in their
statecraft afterwards.
Even while PV Narsimha Rao
ably assisted by his Finance Minister Manmohan Singh sought to force open the
window to the world, which was further carried forward by Vajpayee, they could
not lay their hands on a formidable electoral template. Both were consequently
rejected by the people. They suffered from economic contradictions. They wanted
to write new chapters in Indian economy and polity yet could not shun
ideological imprints of Indira Gandhi fully.
Rao was a Congress man, but
had vision to think beyond the Nehru-Gandhi bank of party ideas. Vajpayee was
an RSS man, but had co-opted socialists, who were non-Congressmen for just
namesake. Vajpayee was a minister in the Morarji Desai Cabinet. The old man was
a hardcore Congress man and rival of Indira Gandhi in her early political days.
Vajpayee propped up VP Singh as Prime Minister also with the support of the
Left parties. VP Singh had spent his life in Congress and had quit the party to
head Janata Dal, which was essentially a loose confederation of provincial
caste chieftains. Vajpayee in his thoughts was centrist, with little leaning to
the right.
It's pertinent to examine
why Modi is the first non-Congress Prime Minister in the true sense. And for
that matter it will equally be important to understand what Congress means as a
political culture. Congress essentially is a political culture wherein the
power of decision making is centralized. Popularly it is called a 'High
Command' culture. This bears strong imprints in the statecraft. Even though India is a Union
of states, with much thrust on federalism, Indian statecraft essentially is of
centralized planning and decision making. The Centre decides what the states
should do. The Centre decides how much money states should spend and under what
heads. The Centre decides what laws states should have.
The easiest illustration of
this is in Indian Parliament enacting a law on acquisition of land in 2013, which
was actually a political legislation thrust upon the government due to Rahul
Gandhi's obsession to do politics of land. Land is a state subject, and all
state governments have their own respective policies or laws on acquisition of
land. Then what was the need for the Centre to enact a law on land and whose
amendments Modi is desperately seeking? Modi believes it has forced a lock-down
on development.
If not for Rahul Gandhi ambushing Bhatta-Parsaul to throw his
weight behind relatively rich farmers of western Uttar Pradesh, India
may have continued with the British time law on acquisition of land. The basic
idea is that the Centre essentially lacks trust in state governments to be fair
in dealing with its people. And that must sound ludicrous, because the state
governments have more connect with the people than the Centre.
Modi is the first
non-Congress Prime Minister, because he has not been touched by the ideology
and culture of the grand old party. He was chief minister of Gujarat
for about 12 years with strong majority in the state Assembly and he never
needed to bend even little to allow Congress to cast its imprints on him.
This culture essentially is
distribution of wealth, centralization of decision making, and sycophancy.
Through the welfare core of the statecraft, Congress envisaged distribution of
wealth among the poor directly. This subsequently birthed politics of poverty. This
book has a chapter on ‘Politics of poverty’ wherein it has been socially,
economically and politically mapped for its extent of distortions. This had the
collateral damage to Indian ethos in the form of rampant corruption, which
spread its tentacles in all walks of lives.
The mode to distribute wealth to the
poor fell prey to the cunning crop of teeming millions who had connections
everywhere to pocket at least half the money transferred by the Centre. They
infected the political class, judiciary, police, and civil society with their
vice. And they gave birth to a corrupt society.
Vajpayee should not be
counted among the non-Congress Prime Ministers purely for the reasons because
he was clueless to clamp down on corruption and the Congress' statecraft on
centralization of decision making exercise. Other six Prime Ministers -- Desai,
Charan Singh, VP Singh, Chandrashekhar, HDS Deve Gowda, and IK Gujral -- were
either from the Congress having crossed over to other parties in search for
greener pastures or were propped up to the post as part of the trick game of
the grand old party, which included Choudhary Charan Singh and Chandrashekhar.
In the chapter, Modi’s 3B, this book graphically
captures Prime Minister’s ‘Bold, Brazen, and Bulldozer’ aspect of
administration. Modi in a few months after his inauguration shut down the
Planning Commission, which by default had subverted the idea of India being a
federal democracy. All chief ministers as a matter of routine would line up
each year to get their annual plans approved by the Planning Commission. Modi
has in place inaugurated NITI Aayog wherein the chief ministers head sub-groups
on various subjects.
But most importantly Modi
assured from the ramparts of the Red Fort, that he would 'neither take bribe
nor allow others to do the same (naa khaaoonga, naa khane doonga)'. No Prime
Minister before him acknowledged the cancer of corruption and owned up
responsibility to crush it down. A year has passed by since the inauguration of
Modi and the economy has resumed its journey on the upward trajectory, but the
real-estate prices in Delhi
and satellite towns around have slumped by at least 20 per cent. The
real-estate in Delhi
zone thrived because the black money was in ample supply. The tap appears to
have been turned off and there is tangible effect on the grounds.
Rao and Vajpayee surely put
India
on high economic growth path. But their times also saw India coming
under the firm grip of Maoists. The Red Corridor dotted India right from the border with Nepal to deep
forests of Chhatisgarh. The Government of India officially admits 80 districts
in the country being in strong grip of Maoists. The Left Wing Extremism spread
its influence among poor tribal and Dalit. They gained followers and
sympathizers, because poor stayed on margins of the society and the economic growth,
which surpassed nine per cent mark in Vajpayee's time, had no effect on their
lives. They could not access those benefits on which the Central government
spent billions of dollars each year.
In Modi, they sensed a rare opportunity to make an
electoral choice to break free from shackles of self-limiting social and
economic conditions. Modi is now an emperor of Indian democracy, because he
broke the caste and community herds, who by habit and conditioning participated
in elections in stereotyped manners. Modi broke many stereotypes and he has to
consolidate and further cement his political path.
There is a clear merit in
Modi being compared with Indira Gandhi. They share similar political clouts,
but differ significantly in their socio-economic outlooks. In the chapter, ‘Politics of poverty’, this book has
sought to put the statecraft of Indira Gandhi and her successors in
perspective.
... (Read more in the book The enabler Narendra Modi)