People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVI
No. 44 November 10,2002 |
BEGINNING OF THE END?
IT appears
from the developments in the last few days that Uttar Pradesh is most probably
going to be the Bharatiya Janata Party’s Waterloo, and herald the beginning of
the end of this party’s fortunes all over the country.
The reason is
simple. Currently being ruled by an opportunistic coalition of the Bahujan Samaj
Party and BJP, UP has been playing a crucial role in the country’s politics
for a long time. It gave the country a large number of towering leaders of our
freedom movement and gave, after independence, the maximum number of prime
ministers. Being the most populous state of Indian Union, it sends as many as 81
members to our Lok Sabha, that is, even after Uttaranchal (with 4 Lok Sabha
seats) was carved out of it.
This precisely
was the reason the BJP and other RSS-controlled outfits like the VHP and Bajrang
Dal have been concentrating on this state. Every now and then, they seek to
resurrect the issue of temple construction in Ayodhya that is situated in this
very state. It was here that they demolished the Babri Masjid in order to
polarise the masses on communal lines --- not only in UP but all over India. In
addition, they have also been threatening to raise the issue of a mosque in
Mathura and the Gyanvapi mosque in Benaras; both lie in the same state. This
temple movement did pay the BJP some dividend and it got a majority in the UP
assembly polls in 1991.
But that was
also the BJP’s best performance in the state. When the BJP governments of UP,
Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Himachal Pradesh were dismissed in the wake of
Babri demolition, and for their assisting role in this heinous act that
threatened our very national unity and the secular framework of our
constitution, the BJP lost assembly elections in three states. As for Rajasthan,
it came to power only through unprincipled manipulations in which it purchased
MLAs from smaller parties.
In UP assembly
elections in 1996 too, the BJP could not muster a majority. At that time, the
assembly was kept in animated suspension for six months. Then in March 1997 a
BSP-BJP coalition government, led by Ms Mayawati, emerged on an unprincipled
note. But this government did not survive beyond six months and died because of
the same ailment of opportunism with which it was born. When the BSP walked out
of the government, the BJP engineered defections from the BSP as also from the
Congress and Janata Dal. It lured as many as six dozen MLAs with the promise of
ministerial gaddis. Thus was born the
biggest ever cabinet in the history of independent India --- of about eight
dozen ministers.
Not
surprisingly, this put the state’s exchequer under great strain. Developmental
activities came to a standstill all over. Municipal bodies too became defunct
for want of resources, so much so that all the cities in UP turned into huge
heaps of stinking garbage. Even the roads leading to an internationally renowned
tourist attraction like Taj Mahal did not escape this fate.
The MLAs that
were now ensconced in ministerial gaddis,
included several notorious criminals and mafia dons. This is what gave the
criminalisation of politics in UP an unprecedented boost. Corruption reached a
peak in this BJP-presided dispensation.
It was in the
midst of the consequent all round hatred for the BJP that the party had had to
face the elections in early 2002. As a matter of fact, the state should have
gone in for assembly polls in September 2001, as the earlier assembly had
already been constituted in October 1996. But the BJP did not have courage to
face the people and got the polls postponed till February 2002 on the spurious
plea that the first sitting of the outgoing assembly had taken place only in
March 1997.
Yet, despite all
its nerve-stretching, despite all the attempts to polarise the UP electorate on
communal lines particularly after Kumbh 2001, the BJP suffered a shattering
defeat. While the Samajwadi Party (SP) emerged as the single biggest party with
141 seats in a house of 403, the BSP got 99 seats and the Congress 25. As for
the BJP, it came a poor third and its seat tally came down by half --- from 177
to 88. Moreover, these 88 include more than a dozen members of the LCP, JBSP,
etc, whom the BJP forced to contest on its own symbol, so that they do not run
away after the polls.
Yet, as a senior
BJP leader in UP told The Statesman
(November 5) on the condition of anonymity, BJP leaders have not learnt any
lessons from their history of debacles. With the active assistance from the UP
governor who has himself been a committed RSS cadre, they indulged in the same
type of dirty game that had made the people abhor their lowly political culture.
Ignoring the spirit of our constitution, the governor did not call the leader of
the largest party to form a government with the proviso that he must prove his
majority within a stipulated period. In its stead, he gave his own party (BJP)
sufficient time, more than a month, to engage in unprincipled manipulations.
This allowed the BJP to strike a deal with the same BSP from which it had once
engineered defections. It was, again, the same BSP that had avenged its
humiliating split in UP by voting against the Vajpayee government at the centre
in April 1999.
That the second
edition of a BSP-BJP government, led by the same (rather self-same) Ms Mayawati,
presents yet another spectacle of opportunism, is clear from several facts. Not
only these parties fought against each other most virulently during the
elections. They also champion, or claim to champion, two diametrically opposite
political philosophies and two different sets of interests. While the BJP stands
for a theocratic Hindu Rashtra and defends the interests of upper castes, the
BSP claims to fight Manuvad and to champion the cause of the Dalit and other
weaker sections. In fact, it was their hatred for a common enemy, Mulayam Singh
Yadav and his SP, that made these parties forge such a coalition.
That the
formation of this coalition was blessed by the prime minister, the deputy prime
minister and RSS leaders, who all never tire of moralising others about
cleanliness in politics and life, speaks volumes about how much divergent their
deeds have been from their words.
The behaviour of
these ministers and other MLAs is such that it gives the people only one
impression: that these gentlemen are out to make as much filthy lucre as
possible before the house is per chance dissolved. Who knows how many of them
will be able to make it to the new assembly if a mid-term election takes place!
That the development works are suffering all over the state, that the people are
crying even for their most basic and minimum needs, is certainly not these
worthies’ concern.
It is therefore
not surprising that the stability of this government was in doubt from Day One.
The last ten-odd days have only boosted such doubts.
For, as the
saying goes, if you sow a wind, you cannot escape reaping a whirlwind. The level
of opportunism that permeates the coalition is so high that Ms Mayawati had had
to effect a dramatic expansion of her coalition ministry --- from about 30 to
80, at one go --- in order to pacify the disgruntled elements. This was a pure
survival strategy and nothing else.
But, to her
dismay, the remedy turned out to be worse than the disease. For, many of those
whose hopes of being inducted into the ministry were belied, rose in revolt. And
these included not only BSP members but also those from the BJP, exploding the
myth the BJP had assiduously cultivated of being a disciplined party. The
spectacle of dissidence in BJP reached such a high pitch that when the prime
minister visited his own constituency after a long gap, he felt compelled to cut
short his visit by seven hours and run away for Lucknow on the pretext of a sore
throat. The real reason was that Vajpayee did not simply have guts to face the
dissidents.
On her part, Ms
Mayawati too crossed the limits of political decency by shamelessly issuing a
statement that she was prepared to effect yet another cabinet expansion if the
BJP so desired!
And then, soon
came a day when 12 BJP MLAs met the governor with the demand that a session of
the assembly must be immediately convened.
But this is what
both the BJP and BSP are extremely afraid of. A number of newspaper reports go
to indicate that the coalition is now in a minority, and the BSP as well BJP
apprehend that an assembly session at this juncture will only bring this dreaded
reality into the open. There are also reports that, including the aforesaid 12
BJP MLAs, as many as 30 are likely to cross the floor if only a session is
convened. This figure is magical in that if 30 MLAs really cross the floor, the
anti-defection law would not apply to them and their membership of the house
would remain safe.
And if a split
takes place in BJP, can a similar split in BSP be far away? It is an open secret
that most of the Muslim members of BSP legislature party are angry with
Kanshiram and Ms Mayawati for having aligned with the BJP that has been guilty
of massacring more than a thousand Muslims in Gujarat. These Muslim members, in
cooperation other disgruntled elements in the BSP, may reach the magic figure of
34 and overturn Ms Mayawati’s apple cart if they get a push in the form of a
split in BJP.
These
developments have made the BJP as well as the BSP leaders as desperate as a
dying man could be. This is evident from the following.
On its part,
with their central leaders’ assent, the state BJP leadership has suspended a
senior leader like Gangabhakta Singh and some others from the party. They did
not have the guts to expel these dissident leaders as that could have made the
latter exempt from the anti-defection law.
In order to keep
their flock in control, BJP and BSP leaders are also doling out the threat that
they could go in for assembly dissolution. Ms Mayawati has already herded her
sheep in a ‘safe’ place somewhere.
On his part the
governor again played his dirty game. As per the SC verdict in Bommai case,
floor of the state assembly is the only place to test the strength of a ruling
party or coalition. But instead of calling a session of UP assembly, the
governor gave the ‘certificate’ that the coalition still enjoys a majority.
Nobody knows how the gentleman reached this conclusion!
At the same
time, chief minister Mayawati too did not shy away from misusing the official
machinery. She booked two dissident leaders --- Raghuraj Pratap Singh alias Raja
Bhaiya and Dhananjay Singh --- under the Gangster Act. There are reports that
they have been implicated in false cases. About the former, for example, it was
said that he was involved in an extortion bid in his constituency even though he
was present in Lucknow at the time of the said incident.
One thing must
be clear. It is nobody’s contention, not in the least, that these MLAs are
idealistic, beyond all reproach, and are itching for the UP people’s welfare.
Raja Bhaiya’s history is also well known. But one will definitely ask: Have
they not been implicated now only because they are threatening the government’s
survival? Did not mafia dons and dreaded criminals rule the state as ministers
for full five years? A dreaded dacoit of Bundelkhand won on the BSP ticket, at
the gunpoint. Is he not a suitable candidate for the Gangster Act or some other
similar act?
Be that as it
may, it is almost certain that the tide of dissidence is going to take over the
BSP-BJP leaders in the next few days.
This is more
worrying for BJP leaders who are to face Gujarat assembly polls one month hence.
Despite all communal depredations in that state, reports go to suggest that the
BJP is not on a sound wicket there. (See excerpts from a Hindu report in “on file” in this issue.) So much so that the
chief minister, about a dozen other ministers and several MLAs are asking the
leadership to allot them “safe” seats. Among other things, the BJP’s
actions to denigrate the Election Commission and other constitutional bodies
have already alienated a large chunk of common masses from the party. In such a
situation, their exit from power in UP will have a direct impact on their
prospects in Gujarat. But this is also the reason that the secular and
democratic forces have to raise their voice that the UP governor must either ask
the state government to seek a vote of confidence or, else, he must dismiss the
government that has clearly lost majority and ask the Samajwadi Party to form an
alternative government.