People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 19 May 12, 2013 |
KARNATAKA
State Not Likely to be Free
from Mafioso Control
G
AS
was guessed by anybody with an iota of
political common sense, it was the Congress that derived all
advantage of the
Karnataka people’s acute desire to punish the Bharatiya
Janata Party (BJP) for
its disastrous rule; the latter also lost because of its
three way division.
Whether the Congress would get a majority on its own or
would have to seek an
alliance with some other party, what would be the extent of
loss of the BJP,
and how much of the discontent would accrue to the Janata
Dal (Secular) ---
these were the only questions of interest that remained. The
anxiety of the
voters to put an end to the BJP government was so great that
the voter turnout
was 70.23 per cent, which was very close to the 71.90 per
cent of 1978 --- the
highest turnout up till now in the history of the Karnataka
assembly polls.
This was in spite of the Election Commission’s persistent
effort to impose a
dull campaign onto the electorate.
It
was thus with several factors working in
its favour that the Congress could have a landslide victory,
though the general
apathy towards the Congress, that was being felt so palpably
throughout, kept
its leaders on tenterhooks till the very end. The Congress
made tall promises
in its manifesto; for example it promised 30 kg of rice per
month to each BPL
family at Rs 1, in competition with the BJP’s assurance of
25 kg at the same
rate. The Congress assured a Rs 4 subsidy on every litre of
milk, remunerative
prices for farmers as per the recommendation of
an expert committee, interest free loan of Rs two
lakh for every farmer,
heavy investment in irrigation and power production, laptops
and digital
notebooks to all PUC students, etc. so much so that the
Congress High Command took
the state leadership to task for doling out “impracticable”
assurances.
The
fact is that such assurances were no
less than cruel jokes being played upon the people as at the
same time the
central government drastically reduced the allocation of
rice to the state,
resulting in a cut of 4 kg per family of five adult members
---from 20 to 16
kg. The central government also reduced the quantum of
fertiliser subsidy, and
proceeding to sign a free trade agreement with the European
Union which would
severely affect the milk producers, among others, of the
state.
The
anxiety of the new rulers is now very
much understandable. When the mining mafia and land mafia,
having affinities to
the BJP, were having a field day, some groups of the very
same mafioso were compelled
to remain just jealous onlookers. Now they cannot allow the
chance to slip and
somehow they have to occupy the seat of power. Who were
these favourites of the
Congress High Command to have got the tickets and would be
the future rulers?
They are brothers Anil Lad and Santosh Lad, D K Shivkumar,
Krishnappa and his
son Priya Krishnappa, Shamanur Shivashankarappa and his son
Mallikarjun --- all
parts of same mining, land and education mafias that
controlled the BJP. Many
of them have hundreds of crores in declared and hidden
wealth. Many who have
won on the BJP and JD(S) tickets are owners of assets worth
tens of crores.
Stranglehold of the same mafia groups on the future
government and the
legislative assembly is thus assured. The question is: can
we expect any let-up
in the brazen loot of the natural and human resources of
Karnataka?
How
have these people won?
There
was hardly any debate during the
campaign on the issues affecting the common people. The main
political parties
were not interested in organising and addressing public
meetings. A few public
meetings were organised only when their national leaders
visited the state.
Most of the campaign was in the form of road shows where
common people were be
provided an opportunity of ‘darshan’ of the very
faces they were seeing
everyday on their TV screens. It was only the CPI(M) that
made serious attempts
to take up issues to the people through many big and small
public meetings.
The
national level leaders of the Congress
and the BJP – Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi and Manmohan singh
on one side and L K
Advani, Narendra Modi, Rajnath Singh, Sushma Swaraj etc on
the other side –
accused one another of corruption and doled out vague
assurances of
development. They did not even refer to their own
manifestoes and the
assurances contained in it.
Their
main modus operandi of these
parties was to stealthily distribute money to the extent of
tens of crores in
many constituencies. Distributing money among the caste
leaders in various
villages and localities, purchasing the followers of
opposite parties etc have
been their regular practice. Now direct distribution to
voters through a
centralised apparatus has become the main mode, with each
house getting 5,000
to 10,000 rupees. They did not refrain from using the
self-help groups and
Stree Shakti groups as easy conduits for money to reach
women. In many
constituencies such groups were distributed Rs 10,000 to
20,000 each. All this
was happening under the very nose of the Election Commission
that was using a
number of bureaucrats from outside and within the state. All
the money its
officials captured would not equal to that spent in any one
single
constituency.
As
for the performance of the CPI(M), it
was found swimming against the high tide of vote purchasing
and other malpractices.
On its part, the party ran its election campaign in every
constituency on the
issues facing the people there, and its expenditure remained
limited to two or
three lakhs in many of the constituencies it contested ---
as against the limit
of 16 lakh rupees legally allowed for each candidate. CPI(M)
general secretary
Prakash Karat and Polit Bureau members Sitaram Yechury,
Brinda Karat, M A Baby,
K Varadarajan and B V Raghuvulu addressed public meetings in
all the
constituencies except two. The CPI(M) could protect its
votes share of the 2008
elections in Bagepalli, the constituency which it won thrice
earlier after 1983
This
time, however, the constituency saw
the poaching attempts of a real estate tycoon and by the end
of the campaign
period all the landlords and other vested interests in the
constituency rallied
around him --- with the result that the incumbent
legislator, contesting on a
Congress ticket, came fourth with only 15,491 votes. More
than 30,000 votes
obtained by the Congress in 2008 went this time to this
independent candidate
who won. The CPI(M) obtained 35,472 votes, almost the same
as in 2008, while
the JD(S) and BJP obtained here 16,779 and 1,084 votes
respectively.