Well. I am not cynical about Team Anna's decision to float a party
Within minutes after
Anna Hazare and his team announced their decision to consider entering the
electoral political scene directly, Union Minister Ambika Soni came out with
her statement that this is evidence of the group having had a political agenda.
Soni’s statement, by implication, meant that only she and her ilk had the right
to contest elections and do what they liked and that the average Indian citizen
shall restrict himself to choosing between one of her kinds to rule the roost. It
is another matter that these were the same people who indicted team Anna for
undermining Parliament’s role in political democracy to stress its “supreme” status.
Soni could not think
otherwise. Someone who entered the political mainstream during the dark days of
the Emergency and being a friend of Sanjay Gandhi in those bad times, cannot be
expected to think any other way. Undemocratic means are a natural course to
such persons. Be that as it may. The fact is Anna Hazare and his close aides
could have decided this way almost a year ago. The eighty-plus year old had
captured the imagination of a cross section of the Indian people, including the
urban middle class, in August 2011 and rattled the establishment.
The atmosphere then had
striking similarities with that in Northern India in November 1973, when JP had
galvanised the youth and the students against the establishment. The then
establishment, in a declaration from Narora, called him a conspirator and even
accused JP of being a CIA agent. Those were times where being called a pro-US
person was as bad as being accused of being an anti-national. We now live in
another time and being pro-US is considered as good as committed to the
nation’s well-being. And after many instances when he and his fellow protestors
were beaten in the public and put in jail, JP finally declared that he will
lead a political alternative to Indira Gandhi’s Congress in the ensuing
elections.
Well. The Congress,
after daring JP to prove his point in an election, developed cold feet and
invoked Article 352 of the Constitution to postpone the polls. The general
elections, due in March 1976 were not held. And when they were held in March
1977, JP proved his point. To cut a long story short, the parallels between
then and the present, when Anna Hazare and his team have reluctantly agreed to
take the plunge. If one is to choose between lobbying for change, putting
pressure for change and trying to be the change, the most democratic option
would be the last; to be the change and go to the people seeking their mandate.
And when the decision was taken, it was an explicit statement that the two
other options did not work.
Even those who agree
that going to the people is the best option in a democracy, would argue that
Anna Hazare too will face the same fate as did JP. The Janata alternative
collapsed and Indira Gandhi returned with a thumping mandate in 1980. Those
will also argue that the Janata party also threw up leaders whose record on
probity was as bad, if not worse, as those against whom JP rallied forces. It
is true that the Janata party ended up as a platform for those who mastered the
art of corruption and the BJP, founded out of the Janata’s rubble was no exception.
But then, the Janata
Party’s birth was not from the crucible of an anti-corruption crusade that JP
launched or the one that was conducted by the students in Gujarat. The experience
of the Emergency mediated the phase between the anti-corruption movement and
the birth of the Janata. And it is also history that Indira Gandhi, during the
emergency, did things that made heroes out of scoundrels. The Emergency regime
released a certain kind of opposition leaders prematurely and encouraged them
striking deals and thus did all that could be done to discredit the opposition.
Recall that the Janata also consisted of a Jagjivan Ram and a H.N.Bahuguna, who
were part of the notorious regime from day one and crossed over just when the
elections were announced. The sequence of events involving Baba Ramdev,
P.Chidambaram and the midnight scoop were indeed similar to that game Indira
Gandhi played 35 years ago.
With a sense of
history, it is incorrect to blame JP for having glossed over these when he put
the Janata Party together. The struggle for restoring political democracy had
to be top on the agenda in March 1977. If JP had insisted upon sticking to his
priorities as it were before June 25, 1975, the leader would have been
condemned guilty of having participated in the destruction of our Republican
Constitution. JP responded to the situation and presided over the process of
the cobbling up of the Janata Party. Let it be known that the Janata Party was
constituted in just 12 days between January 18, 1977 (the day Morarji Desai was
released) and January 30, 1977 when the leaders announced the party. JP and his
colleagues could not afford a longer time because Indira Gandhi’s strategy was to
give the opposition as little time, fox them and ensure victory for her in the
elections.
There are lessons for
Anna Hazare and his team from this. Team Anna has men who are eminently capable
of seeing things. Notwithstanding the naive but earnest Kiran Bedi or an Anupam
Kher there, one would expect Shanti Bhushan, an active player in the making of
the Janata Party to play another role here. Recall that the elder Bhushan had,
in a sense, been one of those catalysts in the making of the crisis then. He
had argued the case for Raj Narain against Indira Gandhi’s election from Rae
Bareili and the judgment in that case had, in a sense, set the stage for the
declaration of the Emergency.
And in the end, unlike
some abstract notes that JP had put forth as the agenda and called that a Total
Revolution, Team Anna has propounded a concrete draft for an effective
legislation against graft. And there lies the hope. The nation can afford to
take another chance even while stay prepared for another disappointment and another
battle thereafter. This is better than putting up with the crop we have.
1 Comments:
The statement of Union Minister Ambika Soni only proves the notion that "powerful people want the power to be concentrated within their hands".not just this, it also gives the sense of fear that UPA has for the possibilities of having strong '3rd front' because even she knows, a large number of Indians vote for them,only because they don't want BJP in power.Now, the peoples' interest to have 'another one' can be fulfilled if team anna forms an independent and democratic party.
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