People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXIX
No. 12 March 20, 2005 |
ATTACK ON THE INSTITUTION OF SPEAKER
THE
BJP’s denigration of the institution of the speaker of the Lok Sabha, once
again, shows the utter contempt with which it holds parliamentary democracy and
institutions of constitutional authority in our country.
During the past six years, there has not been a single constitutional
authority that the BJP has not denigrated. On every occasion, when a
constitutional authority rose to uphold the tenets of secular democracy, the BJP
spared no efforts at mounting abusive attacks. In the past, it has attacked the
Election Commission when it decided not to oblige the BJP-led Narendra Modi
government regarding the timing of the elections.
It attacked the National Human Rights Commission when it exposed the
complicity of the BJP state government in the Gujarat carnage. It attacked the
Supreme Court when it ordered the shifting of the cases pertaining to Gujarat
communal carnage to be heard outside the state. It attacked the Comptroller and
Auditor General, the institution of the governors when their decisions did not
further its interests. It attacked
the office of the President of India and continues to engage in an acrimonious
debate with the former president K R Narayanan.
With every passing day, the people of the country heave a sigh of relief
that the BJP does not control the reigns of State power. For, if it had, then
the process of undermining the constitutional authorities and subverting
parliamentary democracy would have been graver.
The
BJP’s lack of respect for constitutional authorities is a part of its overall
outlook which is opposed to the secular democratic republican character of
India. Being the political arm of the RSS, the BJP only articulates the desire
to convert the secular democratic republic into a rabidly intolerant fascistic
`Hindu Rashtra’.
The
present attack against the institution of the speaker of the Lok Sabha has been
mounted when the speaker suggested that he would convene a meeting of the
presiding officers of the state assemblies to discuss the wider ramifications of
judicial intervention in legislative domain.
In fact, being the presiding officer of the Lok Sabha, the speaker is
duty bound to protect the sanctity of the legislative wing.
In any democracy, the delineation between the three wings of legislature,
executive, and judiciary will have to be scrupulously adhered to. As a democracy matures, many a course correction will have to
be made in order to maintain this balance between the three wings. All
suggestions at refining and improving such balance which will ensure the
relative autonomy of each of the wings
under the supreme sovereignty of the people exercised by
their elected representatives in the legislatures should be welcomed by
all those who cherish democracy.
This,
however, does not seem to apply to the BJP.
The immediate provocation for their outbursts was the decision of the
speaker soon after the Supreme Court’s directive concerning the Jharkhand
assembly. The BJP had earlier denigrated
the Jharkhand governor by likening him with nefarious underground personalities.
Nobody can hold brief for any governor who does not uphold the highest standards
expected of such an office. The CPI(M) has unambiguously maintained this on all
instances in the past, including in the recent Jharkhand episode.
The
BJP, however, had hailed the former
president Shankar Dayal Sharma when he invited Vajpayee to form the government
at the centre in 1996 despite the fact that a majority of the Lok Sabha members
submitted to the president that they are opposed to the communal forces being in
government. In fact, this decision by the then president was made after the
United Front elected H D Deve Gowda as its leader, who commanded a majority of
the elected members.
Within
13 days, however, the wrong assessment of the then president was corrected on
the floor of the Lok Sabha and the United Front government that commanded a
majority was put in office.
Being
inherently anti-democratic, the BJP refuses to accept that constitutional
authorities and institutions are above the interests of any specific party.
Their sole objective must be to strengthen the democratic structures and uphold
unequivocally the secular democratic republican constitution.
An institution or an authority cannot be hailed when it decides in
one’s favour and denounced when it does not. This is a principle that all
parties wedded to parliamentary democracy would uphold but not so the BJP since
its commitment is not to strengthening the secular democratic republic.
The farther they are away from holding State power, the better for the
Indian Republic.