VOX POPULI
by
Aam Admi
Issue: 153 Date: 30.05.2016
Contents:
1. The Need For The Celebrations of Modi Govt.'s
2nd Anniversary?
2. Rishi Kapoor Sets The Cat Among The Pigeons
3. The Enigma That Is Narendra Modi
4. The AAP In Transition
The
Need For The Celebrations of Modi Govt.'s 2nd Anniversary?
One cannot
really see the necessity of the BJP-led NDA government celebrating the
completion of being two years in office. What are Narendra Modi and the
BJP celebrating? Is it the commendable achievement of theirs to having
remained in office for 2 years which is beyond their wildest dreams! Otherwise
one does not see any significance of celebrating the 2nd anniversary and that
too on such a scale. All this when farmers continue to take their lives because
of drought, when there are no indications of prices of commodities and food
items cooling off in the market place, when industrial growth is slowing down,
when agricultural growth is negative, when your exports are falling, when
job growth is negative, when all PSB's along with some of the major private
banks have shown a drastic fall of profits coupled with a massive rise in
NPA’s and when drawal of credit is the slowest for the last many
years by industry. In fact the money spent on these celebrations across the
country and on the newspaper advertisements should have been better used
to spend on relief measures to the needy in our midst like drought affected
people. To get into the celebratory mood that the BJP seems to be in
we should be given special glasses to look around and see everything rosy like
they seem to be seeing. The situation is akin to someone who cannot see
Narendra Modi's 'new clothes' even though everyone seems to be
complimenting him for them in blatant sycophancy. Postscript: When
you write something like this, one is immediately branded as being part of the
opposing party or a political motive is introduced in the equation, while
actually the reality is hiding somewhere there in between the two which our
leaders fail to see. It is almost as if the subject is taboo and one should not
raise it. This happens when we are ruled by mediocre minds which are more used
to understanding duality than the reality of things.
Rishi
Kapoor Sets The Cat Among The Pigeons
Rishi Kapoor
has been absolutely correct while raising the point as to why everything
starting from street names to government schemes should be named from someone
in the Gandhi family and why we do not even think of naming such things with
the names of eminent local people who have made their mark and/or
contributed in public life. To this valid point the Congress party seems to
have taken umbrage and it is said that in Mumbai the party workers have named a
public toilet in Rishi Kapoor's name. The celebrated actor has taken this fact
sportingly and in good humour. In other places Congress workers have been
burning the actor's effigies in public. Is it to actually show outrage or is it
to try to catch the eye of the High Command and get into their good books? If
it is the former then the Congress is behaving exactly like the BJP was doing
on the beef or the nationalism issue, when the Congress had branded
the BJP as intolerant. In the present context is the Congress not able to
stomach Rishi Kapoor's criticism? Carrying this point further the BJP is
presently in the process of launching many a scheme and re-naming some of the
existing schemes in the names of their leaders. So the BJP is no
different. As for the common citizen if the schemes are simply named
after their purpose then it would be easier for them to comprehend if they can
avail it or not rather than scroll down the leader's names which are common for
many a scheme.
The
Enigma That Is Narendra Modi
Maybe at this time when the BJP government led by Narendra Modi is
celebrating two years in office we should analyse the enigma that is Narendra
Modi to properly understand his personality and his response mechanisms. This
particularly so when he is faced with unusual and maybe perplexing situations
that he finds himself being catapulted into at times, by virtue of his
pre-eminent position as Prime Minister of India. From a person who stood up to
the old guard within the BJP, who successfully wooed the RSS top brass and
chose to show his thumb to the other contenders and thus secured the nomination
to be Prime Minister has been an exhilarating journey for the 'chaiwallah'
by his own admission. From then on to the hectic electioneering to obtain the
massive mandate of the absolute majority in the Lok Sabha was another
commendable step. The position that this put Modi in would surely have
convinced him into thinking that he could do no wrong. Embarking with this
mind-set to govern India, the first shuddering brake to that joyous momentum
was when Arvind Kejriwal won that unprecedented majority in the Delhi elections
almost wiping out the presence of all parties including the BJP in the Delhi
legislature. Thus this was to be seen that the capital city which had welcomed
Modi to become the Prime Minister of India had thrown him out when it came to
governing it. The next unnerving thing were the Bihar elections where the JD(U)
and the RJD cobbled a hurried alliance and relegated the BJP to the opposition.
In the meanwhile there were minor setbacks in one or the other by-elections to
the State Assemblies where the BJP again faltered. The latest Assembly election
results are nothing much to crow about since statistics show that other parties
won more seats than the BJP in these elections, the BJP lost 4 out of 5 States
and the only gain in Assam was because of the three term incumbency of the
Congress where the BJP got the anti-incumbency vote and also the emotive vote
about the illegal immigration from Bangladesh into the State.
Prime Minister Modi had in the initial euphoria charted out a
foreign policy program to woo the world and bring home to them the new BJP
establishment holding office in India. Like the honeymoon is most often tinged
with rosy hues Modi's charm brought him kudos from almost every single foreign
capital that he touched more so from the Indian diaspora in these countries.
And he did touch a few capitals around the world and some multiple times in
these last two years! But then he found that he did have to come back home and
show that he was capable to govern the country. In that responsibility he has
been an infrequent visitor even to Parliament and the butt of many a joke from
his co-MP’s among which is that the MP’s found him reaching for his seat-belt
when settling down in his place in the Lok Sabha!
One finds Modi in contrasting almost contradicting styles like he
is an excellent orator given a lectern but completely tongue-tied like his
predecessor in the Prime Minister’s office when having to confront any public
issue that is seizing the minds of the people. He continued to remain silent on
the beef debate, the intolerance wave that emerged from that while his BJP
compatriots and some of them ministers indulged in their foot in the mouth
exercises while commenting on these sensitive matters. This continued with Modi
again strangely silent when issues of nationalism, sedition came up and people
were being judged on their patriotism by whether they were willing to say – Bharat Mata ki Jai! We needed a
hands-on Prime Minister to steer the country from the rot that had set in
during the earlier UPA regime where we find Modi sorely lacking. One sees him
as a person prone to being bombastic, with a penchant for populist slogans and
with an addiction to rename all schemes to the NDA signature. The result is
that the Indian public is confused about the various schemes which are rolled
out in event management style and no one is sure if any of them are being
implemented. Since otherwise why should farmers continue to take their lives
during the current drought for fear of being unable to pay their loans when a
crop insurance scheme is stated to exist? The same way the much touted – Make
In India – is nothing new since the emphasis on indigenous production has been
in existence since the first Five Year Plan which has created the existing
industrial base in the country and the 3rd largest technical manpower pool in the
world. What was required was jobs for this youth manpower which the Modi
government has sadly been unable to provide in any large measure during these
last two years in office.
Concluding one must say that Narendra Modi should show more
application and resolve to perform as Prime Minister of India, improve the
policy measures of his government which are today mostly shallow and without meaning
and show an ability to effectively handle the economy to contain inflation and
to provide more jobs to our people to create sustained earning power. There are
still another three years to go before the General Elections come around which
is time enough to show that Narendra Modi can lead India to a meaningful and
sustainable growth path and not constantly look back to point faults of the
preceding regime and seek shelter in comparisons but strike out to new
frontiers of his own.
The AAP In Transition
The AAP led by
the feisty Arvind Kejriwal is bringing in a new edge to politics in India.
Their style is strident and is staged on brinkmanship. Being a new party, these
tactics are essential for them to be noticed and considered seriously. However in
their stridency the AAP sometimes comes across as brash, intrusive, immature
and insulting which they have to be careful about particularly when they seek
to branch out to other States. They have also used the victim position vis a
vis the BJP government at the Centre to their full advantage and have thus
reinforced their image in the minds of the Delhi voter. At the same time the
AAP party has taken initiatives which may be populist but which are firmly
embedded in today's politics to entrench themselves in the image of
a citizen friendly party. The BJP one must say read the message of the
massive mandate given by Delhi to the AAP party wrongly and instead of letting
them run the government and commit mistakes and then take advantage of it, the
BJP has got into a confrontation mode with AAP. This has therefore allowed the
AAP leadership to wrest the initiative from the BJP and portray themselves as
someone with good intentions but not being allowed to perform by the Big
Brother at the Centre. This has also enabled the AAP to keep the agenda
of full Statehood of Delhi in the forefront and show that the BJP is the
party that is thwarting the best interests of Delhi. Both the BJP and the
Congress being used to the laid-back style of politics involving policies like
- 'You scratch my back and I will scratch yours.' - are unable to read the AAP
strategies correctly and thus flounder miserably in the manner of their
reacting to issues raised by AAP. This was evident when the AAP sometime back
went for Arun Jaitley's gullet on the DDCA issue where both the implicated
person, the Finance Minister, and the BJP did not know what to do in the light
of the escalating crescendo of Arun Jaitley's alleged wrongdoing in DDCA
affairs. The same was also true to the recent noise generated by AAP on Modi’s
educational degrees. If it was the Congress then the BJP would remain
comfortable in the fact that after a few headline grabbing
pronouncements the matters would be allowed to simmer down. Not so with
AAP where more often than not the matter ends up in the courts. Thus in overall
terms AAP tends to operate as a disruptor in Indian politics. Whether it is a
good thing or something purely transitory with the AAP fading away only time
will tell. If recent indicators are any guideline, AAP like other political
parties at times of their evolution, showed the door to some of its senior
leaders who were not aligned to the views of the super honcho, Arvind Kejriwal.
You could call this cleansing or consolidation which allows the leadership to
wield authority with the least ambiguity. Other than that over the last few
months we have seen a spate of advertisements in national mainline newspapers
on the achievements of the AAP government in Delhi projecting Arvind Kejriwal
prominently. These are again conventional methods of political parties to build
an image in the minds of voters. With AAP falling prey to these tactics, one
could ask where now is AAP, the party with a difference as they had promised?
These ads have also been at a phenomenal cost exceeding some Rs. 100 crores
which would it not have been better to spend on development or measures that
directly benefit citizens. Thus one would be compelled to say
that you had a new babe on the block, the AAP that is, which promised to
be different but as days are passing by, it is resorting to the same tricks of
the trade that the entrenched political parties play. Maybe like the old
adage says - As much as you bring about change, things tend to remain the same.
This must be true here also. It is also felt that the AAP needs to put in
a special effort still to consolidate and show that they can run a government
effectively before considering pan – India expansion. It is acceptable for them
in the north like Punjab but they have also plans to come to Goa and in a
public rally last week here in Panaji, Arvind Kejriwal raised local
hackles by calling Goa a haven for - Sex, Drugs and Gambling. There is merit in
this statement but in comparative terms all these problems are much less
than in Delhi or other metropolitan cities in India. So should you not clean up
your own dirty stables before pointing fingers at Goa, which remains the No. 1
family holiday destination in India.
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