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'Modi lost because he did not corporatize fast enough?'
By
Saeed NaqviPoliticians and pundits across the country have been served notice by
the Delhi electorate: please take a bow and make way. Mingled with the
voter’s ecstasy is a primeval cry: we are tired of old politics.
Meanwhile Kejriwal’s cup runneth over.
“Dene waley mujhe dena hain to itna de de
Phir mujhe shikwa e kotahiye daaman ho jaaeyâ€
(Creator,
shower on me your blessings in such abundance that I turn to you with
my next supplication: O Creator, give me more space.)
There, out
of the window, goes my plan to take a seat in the press box to write my
“ringside†column on the Delhi assembly. Parliament has become a
predictable bore; it would have been fun tracing the new assembly’s baby
steps.
A daily piece on the present assembly will inevitably
bring Messrs Jagdish Pradhan (Mustafabad), Om Prakash Sharma (Biswas
Nagar) and Vijendra Gupta (Rohini) into disproportionate focus. In
parliamentary systems, the opposition provides the flavour. If they are
smart, the BJP trio can hog all the limelight, force development in
their constituencies. Property prices would shoot.
It will be no
fun for the media carrying handouts from the treasury benches. Anxiety
for TRP ratings may trigger inventiveness. Searchlights will locate
AAP’s internal faultlines. Sixty-seven members in a house of 70 are one
too many to be accommodated in a cabinet which, by law, can only have
six ministers, Delhi being only a union territory.
Rumours were
floated that Adarsh Shastri from Dwarka, a first time legislator, may be
made a minister. Why? Because he was a senior executive with Apple.
Comes a non sequiter from the rank and file: does AAP belong to Apple or
the poor man?
Take a Muslim minister; don’t take one. This is
the second untended crop of AAP in two years. This year has been a
bumper harvest. Still too early to visualize a party with a coherent
ideology. It will have to improvise some more before it finds its feet.
But
the luxury of coming to power with 54 percent of the popular vote, 96
percent of seats has clearly filled AAP with courage to gamble for
truth, fairness, justice and secularism which the Congress bartered
away. The BJP never claimed to be secular.
If Narendra Modi’s
economists have coaxed a lesson from the defeat, what will it be? How
will it express itself in the budget later this month? The US treasury
Secretary Jacob J. Lew is at hand, just in case Modi falters. The pink
papers (and the New York Times) would like Modi to count his worry beads
and chant: I lost because I did not corporatize fast enough. The great
cartoonist, R.K. Laxman would have had a field day.
NYT has
almost dared Modi. “After imploring Americans, Japanese and Chinese, as
well as Indians, to believe in his vision, it is a good bet that no
Indian federal budget will be more scrutinized for what it may, or may
not, deliver on building infrastructure, reforming taxes and making a
tangled, stratified system more efficient than the one Modi is expected
to make public by the end of the month.â€
Soon there will have to
be an AAP budget. Comparisons will be fascinating. And, further afield,
comparisons with the far left Syriza in Greece, will disturb and excite.
Last
year a statement was extracted from Kejriwal: he was fine with
capitalism but not crony capitalism. And yet, there is a resemblance
between Kejriwal and Alexis Tsipras of Syriza party. Both are in their
40s, charismatic and pro-poor. But unlike Tsipras, Kejriwal has not
evolved from doctrinaire Marxism. The ideologues around Kejriwal like
Prof. Anand Kumar and Yogendra Yadav, derive more from socialism of the
Lohia school.
Looking for resemblances nearer home, AAP’s welfare
net may be quite as extensive as Jayalalita’s in Tamil Nadu. And
Jayalalita’s grip on the electorate is quite firm, fiscal discipline or
no fiscal discipline.
In the new politics that the AAP has set into
motion, Jayalalita, Naveen Patnaik, with luck, Nitish Kumar, are the
only regional leaders who may survive the coming rounds. Ignored by the
media, Manik Sarkar, the Communist chief minister of Tripura, in his
fourth term, exists in a different zone altogether.
Just look at
the JD-U-JD parade outside Rashtrapati Bhavan. A less appetizing
congregation of political turncoats is difficult to imagine. What chance
does this lot have against a force of such freshness as AAP.
Unfortunately,
neither the AAP nor a residual Congress exists in Bihar to make any
difference. Could disgusted electorate, starved of choices, lurch in
unforeseen directions. Which direction? Before the JP movement ousted it
in the mid-70s, there was a lively Left movement in Bihar.
Syriza
is part of a long tradition of Euro communism. The infection could
spread to Spain, Portugal, Ireland, Italy. Paradoxically, the Nordic
North of Europe, traditionally liberal, has turned sharply to the right,
frothing in the mouth against immigration.
As part of the global grid, India cannot remain unaffected and the AAP, by the same logic, cannot be just a local happening.
(A
senior commentator on political and diplomatic affairs, Saeeq Naqvi can
be contacted on [email protected]. The views expressed are
personal.)