People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVI
No. 25 June 24, 2012 |
HIMACHAL PRADESH
Challenge to Consolidate
the People’s Victory -- II
Rakesh Singha
THE
most important aspect
of the SMC election is the reasons attributed to the defeat
of both the BJP and
Congress, who had injected their maximum resources, of
money, muscle and
manpower, and the political space the election results have
created for the growth
of progressive and Left politics not only within the
jurisdiction of the
corporation but that in the state of Himachal Pradesh.
However, before making
an analysis of this, something needs to be recorded about
the Congress party. Though
it is a product of the freedom movement, its
"corporatisation" under
the aegis of neo-liberalism has diminished its glow which it
was born with.
TUG OF WAR
IN CONGRESS
A tug
of war had taken place
among the Congress stalwarts over the selection of their
nominees for the mayor
and deputy mayor posts. Factions of the Congress party had
only one common
factor among themselves --- surety of their party’s victory
which they had
arrogantly declared even before the announcement of the
election schedule. They
did not anticipate that the people had something else in
store for them. They
were under deep illusion that the anti-incumbency feeling
against the four and a
half years of Dhumal government would insure automatic
victory for them. They
were unable to sense the anti-incumbency that existed
against their own 26
years in running the corporation.
High
drama preceded the
finalisation of Madhu Sood’s name for the mayor's post. Her
husband, a high
profile construction contractor who also has to his credit
the construction of Congress
Bhawan in Shimla, had made an open announcement through the
columns of the
vernacular press that he would offer Rs one crore in return
for his wife’s nomination
for the mayor's post. He was even prepared for her being
nominated by the BJP.
In fact, prior to the date of nomination filing, there were
news from the RSS
office that Madhu Sood, who had been mayor for the last two
and a half years,
would be the BJP’s nominee for the post. What the people
would say as to why
the SMC mayor who belonged to the Congress party has
overnight switched her
loyalty to the BJP, made no difference to her.
The
next important
question that needs to be answered is: why the electorate of
Shimla reduced the
Congress nominees of the Congress party to poor thirds. The
core reason of
course was the alienation of the people from the Congress
due to its greater love
for neo-liberal policies than for the “aam adami.” But there
have been local
factors too, which need to be analysed.
Firstly,
no battle can be
won under the command of a weak general. Not only is Anand
Sharma a weak
general of the Congress party, he does not have experience
of a battle either despite
being an important minister in the central cabinet and a
darling of 10 Janpath.
While the general, in an electoral battle, must be given the
task of a star
campaigner in order to generate confidence among the people,
this general has been
accustomed to corporate environment where meetings are held
in air conditioned
drawing rooms and links with the masses are not through
street corner meetings
or in galis and mohullas but through press conferences, SMC
messages or twittings.
Building direct contacts with the people invites the danger
of getting infected
by diseases of the poor and downtrodden. Hence the corporate
culture ‘innovates’
new methods to reach out to the people without building
direct contacts.
Secondly,
if the people
are compelled to choose between two bourgeois landlord
parties, a better choice
is to choose those who are in state power. This gave the BJP
an advantage over
the Congress.
Thirdly,
the people of
Shimla have already tested Madhu Sood and the policies she
had pursued in the last
two and a half years of her mayorality. Each and every
citizen of Shimla knew
that the BJP state government had, in connivance with her,
given permission to
the DLF company to construct a colony for those who
represent the ‘Shinning
India,’ for the representatives of the corporate houses. In
this case, the
Municipal Corporation violated all the rules and regulations
in a record time
--- permission for the colony’s construction was granted in
one single day
after it was sought. This was in sharp contrast to the
bitter reality that
dalit people’s colonies have not been regularised over the
decades together and
that the residential houses of some 40,000 people in the
merged areas were designated
as illegal constructions for no fault of theirs. For this
reason electricity
and water connections are being charged at commercial rates
and, also, there is
the perennial threat of their homes being demolished in case
they did not
behave themselves.
Lastly,
the neo-liberal
policies not only make the rich richer and the poor poorer;
traditional bases
of the bourgeois landlord parties is also undergoing a
change. This adds to a weakening
of the political structure and in order to keep a grip over
the people, these parties
rely upon the backward consciousness of caste, creed,
religion, region etc. The
neo-liberal era and the growth of identity politics go side
by side. Madhu Sood
belonged to the most powerful caste in the business
community which not only
controls the business in Shimla town; its numerical strength
too is decisive in
electoral contests. Apart from belonging to a crorepati
family, the other
consideration of the Congress party to field her for the top
post was her
identity of belonging to the Sood community. Also, it was
for the same reason
that the BJP was trying to lure her. But the Congress failed
to realise that
the identity politics would gets eclipsed with the growth of
the Left and
democratic politics.
THE KEY
TO SUCCESS
Our
party does not have
much experience in Himachal Pradesh, but based upon the
understanding of
repeated party congresses, it has attempted to build
struggles on local issues
in order to advance. A Communist Party cannot attract the
people by raising revolutionary
slogans alone; people mobilise on issues which affect their
day to day life. However,
in areas where the Communist Party is weak, it is difficult
to attract people by
raising their demands from the platform of the party. It
needs to be the
platform of a mass organisation which may attract even the
persons with the
most backward consciousness. The purpose is not just to
achieve the demands
which can be achieved only by organising the people and
bringing them into
struggle. But the struggle must continue till the demands
are wholly or partially
achieved, no matter how long it takes. This explains the
importance of identifying
the issues of immediate and achievable nature, which may be
taken up first. But
this too is not sufficient; after the first successes the
main struggle is of strengthening
and consolidating the mass organisation of the people and
identifying people who
could be brought closer to the party and finally made its
members. If this is
not done in continuity or treated as a part of the whole,
any will only temporarily
take the people away from the fold of the bourgeois landlord
parties and, once
the influence of the struggle gets weakened, they will go
back to the party
under whose influence they had been earlier.
What
kind of mass organisation
needs to be formed in urban areas would vary from place to
place. In Shimla, we
have had the Shimla Nagrik Sabha that has been raising the
day to day problems
of the people since the last one and a half years. However,
it is the class and
other mass organisations that have been serving as the core
of the Sabha.
The
readers will be
surprised to learn that the focal demand in three different
local struggles were
just of removing the barriers put to the local pathways by
influential people.
In one case the pathway of daily use had been blocked by a
high police officer;
in another by a land mafia and in the third by the CPWD
management. The impact
of our struggles helped in removing the blockades and left a
very deep impact on
the people. It was beyond their imagination that the
people’s struggle has the greatest
force. No goon, no mafia or no police officer, however high
he may be, is able to
face the collective will of the people.
For
example, in the case
of the barricade put up by the CPWD, the people had
exhausted all kinds of
methods to settle the dispute but failed. The dispute was
pending since 2002.
On one occasion, the local people affected by the barricade
threw a lavish
lunch party to the DGW of the CPWD but that too was of no
avail. The common man
outside the fold of an organised movement is often bullied
by the powerful --- a
land mafia, a police officer or a contractor. It is only the
people’s common
will which is able to liberate them from harassment and
exploitation. It is
this process which changes his consciousness.
In
the past two years the
Shimla Nagrik Sabha has been able to carry out innumerable
struggles, though
some were even limited to a mohulla.
One of the struggles pertained to reducing the bus fare of
JNNURM buses from a
minimum of Rs ten to five; another related to the problems
arising from the
shifting of a bus stand. All these struggles brought their
own experiences and
helped us to reach out to new sections who are outside the
party fold.
Apart
from the struggles of
the Shimla Nagrik Sabha, other sections of the population
too fought their
struggles from the platform of the SFI, JMS, DYFI and CITU
etc. All these helped
to augment the fighting image of the party and, in the
ultimate analysis,
increased its electoral strength in the corporation.
THE CPI(M)’S
PERFORMANCE
In
the last Municipal
Corporation elections held in 2007, the CPI(M) was able to
poll only 6,592 votes,
in comparison to 28,904 polled by the INC and 25,786 by the
BJP. However, in
the recent elections, the party has increased its strength.
It contested
elections in 20 wards on the party symbol and supported four
independent
candidates. It was able to win three councillor seats and
came second in seven
other wards, polling a total of 12,755 votes, or 24.60 per
cent of the votes
polled, while the BJP has 12 councillors polling 18, 848
votes (36.35 per cent)
and the Congress has won 10 councillors polling 17,624 votes
(33.99 per cent). But
for the mayor's post the people gave a decisive verdict in
favour of the CPI(M)
and we polled 22,169 votes (43.37 per cent) against the
BJP’s 14,035 (27.45 per
cent) and the Congress’s 13,278 (25.37 per cent). For the
post of deputy mayor,
the party polled 21,176 votes (40.88 per cent of the votes
polled) against the
BJP’ 16,418 (31.69 per cent) and the Congress’s 13,205 votes
(25.49 per cent).
Now
the party is preparing
for the next electoral battle --- for the assembly elections
to be held in October-November
2012. As a part of the preliminary preparations the party
has identified 21
assembly seats which it proposes to contest. However, the
final decision would
be taken by the state committee meeting to be held in Shimla
on June 26-27, 2012.