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Politics and Public Policy in India

Making the Third Front redundant perhaps even irrelevant – Rediff Column and a Podcast

Originally published on Rediff.com. Also listen to related podcast conversation with @dubash of phalaka.com on the same topic.

The electoral outcome from last week’s five assembly elections have, interestingly, triggered more speculation on the revival of a third front than on the likelihood of a mid-term poll. A mid-term poll maybe a slim possibility at this point in time but that slim possibility, however, has not tamped down speculation on a possible third front or, as some would rather call it, a “federal front”. Much number-crunching has been doing the rounds on the clout a third front could carry with another grand coming together of regional parties from Bengal to Punjab [ Images ] circling the two coasts.

One can point to at least three reasons for the heightened third front speculation in recent days. First is that Mulayam Singh has freed himself up for a potential job in Delhi [ Images ]. Second, are the dire straits in which both the Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party [ Images ] find themselves in the largest state in the country, which feeds into the dominant narrative on the growing clout of regional parties. Last is the Delhi punditry’s soft corner for Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, hence any speculation on a 3rd front finds a natural resonance in a Delhi that nurtures fond hopes of his prime ministerial candidacy.

None of the above reasons, however, indicate a structural shift that would make a third front government any more viable than it was in the late 1980s-1990 during the VP  Singh, Chandra Shekhar era or in the mid-1990s during the Deve Gowda [ Images ], IK Gujral era.  In fact, one would wonder why any successful regional satrap who today enjoys absolute power in the state capitals would want to suffer the ignominy that befell Deve Gowda. 

Who in their right mind would want to become the Deve Gowda of the 2010s?

The political reality of every regional party that is in power today is that they are all one-man, one-woman shows with neither an institutionalized mechanism for succession nor a culture of tolerance for alternate power centres within the party. With the exception of a Mulayam Singh in Uttar Pradesh [ Images ] and a Prakash Singh Badal in Punjab, both of who are relatively in a better place to bequeath their legacy in the states for a stint at the Centre, the rest of the regional satraps can barely afford to jeopardise their iron grip on affairs in their respective states.

It is conceivable that a Mulayam Singh or a Sharad Pawar [ Images ] may fall for the same temptation that Chandra Shekhar did for a stint in 7 Race Course Road, howsoever short that stint might turn out to be, given the steroid boost to their legacy from such a stint in their twilight years.

But a Mulayam or Pawar’s morbid desire for a posthumous legacy can hardly be the reason for either the BJP or the Congress and even Delhi’s punditry to cheerlead a Third Front government into power.

In fact, the Congress, which has the distinction of having propped up every third front government to date with the exception of VP Singh’s National Front government, ought to be highly circumspect of playing kingmaker in Delhi given its dubious track record. The Congress’s natural instincts are at odds with playing kingmaker. Any third front experiment that expects to be propped up by the Congress can be considered to be inherently unstable pending a clinical death.

It is also hard to foresee a scenario where the BJP would willingly prop up a third front government given how regional parties have expanded at its expense over the years.

In fact, the only likely scenario for a third front is a repeat of 1996 when the Congress, the Left and other regional parties went out of their way to thwart Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s [ Images ] ascendancy to power. It is conceivable that such a scenario could very well play out with a Narendra Modi-led BJP being isolated by most parties barring all-weather allies like the Shiv Sena [ Images ] and the Akali Dal.

Such a scenario may actually be in the BJP’s interest just as it played out in 1996 in the case of Vajpayee who made a come-back twice riding on a groundswell of public support against the politics of untouchability. There aremany barriers against such a scenario playing out, not the least from within the BJP.

There is, however, a less talked about parallel and it has to do with the original third or rather second front government from the late 1970s. The Janata Party experiment saw multiple regional and supra-regional parties merge their identity in favour of a common national symbol. The Janata experiment first came apart on the issue of dual membership before ultimately falling prey to personality differences.

In this season of federalism it may not be far-fetched to attempt to forge a new federal compact ascribing a new meaning to the idea of dual membership. It is not inconceivable that elections in India can be fought by a party maintaining a distinct regional identity in state elections while merging to fight on a common symbol in the national elections.

Such a truly federal front would be the ideal second front to challenge the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance [Images ]. Such a federal front would make the need for a third or fourth front redundant, perhaps even irrelevant. 

Filed under: federalism, Mayawati, Narendra Modi, Nitin Gadkari, nitish kumar, Offstumped Podcasts

Samajwadi Party sweeps Uttar Pradesh – 3 Yadavs shine

Predicting electoral outcomes in the treacherous swamps of heartland politics in India can be dangerous.

That the Samajwadi Party was on the rebound has been the news since Ashok Malik’s initial observations.

That there was a wave of anti-incumbency against Mayawati was less than obvious as noise from Delhi filled the air and extraneous issues took center stage from land acquisition to a Muslim sub-quota.

That the BJP’s Mahasangram, Jan Chetana had bombed was amply clear from the manner in which the election campaign in Uttar Pradesh became a below the radar, backroom affair with a belated Uma Bharti entry.

That the Rahul Gandhi, Priyanka Vadra factor was good TV in as much as Anna Hazare was good for TRPs also became amply clear as multiple rounds of lowering of expectations began as well as the Congress foolishly persisted with its desperation over the Muslim vote.

But who would have thought that the voter in Uttar Pradesh would hand such a decisive verdict to the SP ?

In this victory for Akhilesh Yadav and Mulayam Singh Yadav it is odd that a 3rd Yadav should partake of some limelight. Yogendra Yadav stuck his neck out to go where no pollster has gone before in recent memory. Guess he may have overcompensated for some of that SP performance to err on the higher side.

Back in September of 2011 when the miasma of asinine cliches that passes for news and opinion in Delhi’s studios was focused on Sonia Gandhi’s health, Anna Hazare’s fast, the Social Spectator – an obscure online magazine carried a prolific piece of prose by Frank Huzur writing from Lucknow in Uttar Pradesh. The piece was titled “Chariot of Hope – Cycle of Change“. and it opened with these lines:

He may not be Harrison Ford. But he is surely James Dean. The rebel with a cause for socialist celebre!

In all of 2011, Google News Archives show at least 5000 odd stories on “Rahul Gandhi”. No, Frank Huzur was not talking of “Rahul Gandhi”, he was writing on Akhilesh Yadav who according to Google News Archives in 2011 managed a paltry 21 news stories. From that obscurity in 2011, Akhilesh Yadav has clearly come a long way to script his father’s comeback in Uttar Pradesh.

While the results will be analyzed threadbare in the next few hours, days and weeks there is a sobering lesson for those of us who have been conditioned to view politics in India from a Delhi lens.

No it is not on the Rahul Gandhi hype, which we were always sceptical about.

There is a deeper lesson on our conditioning that forces to think of Uttar Pradesh in purely casteist terms. This blogger had been immensely critical of a campaign strategy that focused purely on the calculus of caste while failing to project a pan-Uttar Pradesh agenda. There in lies a lesson for both analysis that held out some hope for Mayawati’s BSP as well as for a campaign strategy that viewed the BJP as a dark horse in Uttar Pradesh.

Rahul Gandhi has bombed before, and this outcome in UP is more confirmation of his limitations as a future leader for the Congress. The Nehru Gandhi brand may disproportionately sway the national discourse but it continues to underwhelm in state elections.

What is however stunning is how deeply the BJP leadership in Uttar Pradesh had its head buried in the sand. Instead of blaming amateur psephologists for decisions that ought to have been the Leadership’s gambles, the BJP needs to wake up to the reality that its status quoist strategies of incremental linear growth have run their course. There is no new ground left to break and there is little hope of reclaiming old ground.

The BJP has indeed emerged as a dark horse albeit on its way to nowhere. That the BJP needs a radical overhaul is an understatement !

Postscript:

- The BJP’s resounding win in Goa results and its partner SAD doing extremely well in Punjab to make history do little to hide the fact that it has been squeezed out of the largest state.

Tailpiece:

- The Presidential election later this year is now in flux unless the Congress manages to drive a hard bargain with the Samajwadi Party

Filed under: Advani Yatra against Corruption, Anna Hazare, Assembly elections 2011, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, उत्तर प्रदेश २०१२, Baba Ramdev, betrayal of aam admi, Indira Gandhi, Internet Hindus, Left Liberalism, Manmohan Confidence Vote, Mayawati, Narendra Modi, Nitin Gadkari, Offstumped, OpEds on Uttar Pradesh Polls 2012, Two Indias, UPA-II Critical Appraisal, Uttar Pradesh Polls 2012, Varun Gandhi

Uttar Pradesh Results 2012 – Live Blogging

Many reputations are on the line as Uttar Pradesh and the other states count their votes.

Will the tsunami predicted for the Samajwadi Party by CNN-IBN and CSDS’ Yogendra Yadav manifest in a near absolute majority ?

Will Punjab persist with its flip-flop trend of voting out incumbents ?

Will Uttarakhand go the way of Goa and other small states from stable bipolarity to unstable multipolarity ?

Will Manohar Parrikar make a comeback in Goa ?

Finally who among the BJP, BSP and Congress will end up with bragging rights if not prizes for coming second, third and fourth in Uttar Pradesh ?

Follow Offstumped live during the coverage of the counting of votes in Uttar Pradesh, Punjab, Uttarakhand, Manipur and Goa at the below:

More updates as the day unfolds …..

For the complete archive of the full coverage of Uttar Pradesh Polls 2012 so far including pre-poll and post poll podcasts, all OpEds, all BlogPosts and the detailed phase wise, seat by seat analysis click here.

Filed under: Advani Yatra against Corruption, Anna Hazare, Atal Bihari Vajpayee, उत्तर प्रदेश २०१२, Baba Ramdev, betrayal of aam admi, Internet Hindus, Live Events, Mayawati, Narendra Modi, Nitin Gadkari, Offstumped on Twitter, UPA-II Critical Appraisal, Uttar Pradesh Polls 2012, Varun Gandhi

Lokpal – Rajya Sabha Stalls what Lok Sabha passed, UPA exposed

Blog Post Updated with Latest from Lokpal Debate in Rajya Sabha on 29th Dec:

The farce over the Lokpal could not have ended with sweeter irony than to the tune of Vande Mataram marking the abrupt adjournment of the Rajya Sabha session. The moment reminded one of the poignant ending of the political satire “Jaane Bhi Do Yaaron” as a pair of whistleblower Journalists march to Jail to the tune of “Hum honge kamiyaab”.

The concept of the Lokpal was flawed, the Government’s 2011 bill was half-baked but the events in the Rajya Sabha were farcical beyond the pale.

The silver lining of course is the manner in which Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi’s stewardship of the Government stands exposed. While Rahul Gandhi will have to live down the embarrassment of  his half baked game changer proposal being defeated, Sonia Gandhi will have to forever bear the ignominy of her party running away from Parliament.

The UPA has no credibility left, unfortunately though we are stuck with this lame duck government for some more time thanks to the collective  insecurities of the political class .

Original Blog post on Lokpal Bill being passed by Lok Sabha

Perhaps this is what you get when you guilt trip the entire political class into doing something that none of them believe in.

As was suspected earlier in August of 2011 the political consensus that emerged post black-mail by Anna Hazare’s fast meant that a half baked Lokpal Bill was inevitable. The Lok Sabha has passed the bill while drama ensued over the Constitutional amendment with Leader of Opposition Sushma Swaraj pointing out the UPA’s technical tardiness in complying with the rules. Ultimately Rahul Gandhi’ “game changing” dream lay shattered with the Opposition voting down the associated Constitutional Amendment.

There is still half of a battle left in the Rajya Sabha but if the “secular” walkouts witnessed today in the Lok Sabha by the SP and the BSP are anything to go by then the debate in Rajya Sabha is likely to be of mere academic value than of real legislative consequence. But given the Congress’ monumental incompetence no surprises or reverses must be ruled out.

The real test for this half baked Lokpal once fully passed will likely be in the Courts specifically on the provisions for Quota within the Lokpal. It will be interesting though who will mount that legal challenge given how coy Team Anna has been about the quota issue.

Where Team Anna goes from here is an open question, with much of the streets anger fizzled out and Delhi’s media studios lining up to cheerlead Rahul Gandhi all the way to the Uttar Pradesh polls on his “game changing” moves despite the UPA’s tardiness.

2011 showed us the brilliant tactician that Arvind Kejriwal was but perhaps he forgot the old adage – “beware of what you ask for, you might actually get it”.  Contriving further public anger on this half baked Lokpal will be tough. Will 2012 show us if there is a patient strategist lurking somewhere inside him to build on this to launch a political platform, shake up Uttar Pradesh.

The Congress in general and Rahul Gandhi in particular end 2011 on a promising note having tucked away both Religion based Quotas and the credit for a politically correct Lokpal. What electoral dividends this brings in UP is an open question but it blunts much of the Opposition’s fire save for the glee of having embarrassed Rahul Gandhi.

All said and done once the dust over the Parliamentary vote settles, as far as Uttar Pradesh polls go the Congress gets the credit for the Bill that the BSP and SP walked out on and the BJP voted against.

The BJP made a monumental mistake batting for Lokpal as Team Anna’s B-Team. It now stands with neither the credit for the Lokpal having opposed the bill in Lok Sabha and nor as the beneficiary any residual public anger against this half-baked Lokpal as Team Anna itself stares at the Law Diminishing Returns.

The defeat of the Constitutional Amendment is a tactical win for the BJP at best. It denies bragging rights to Rahul, makes his media cheerleaders look like asses but beyond that it doesn’t fetch much.  It has not stalled or reversed the half baked Bill unless some magic happens in the Rajya Sabha.

Its over to Arun Jaitley for now  !

Filed under: Advani Yatra against Corruption, Anna Hazare, उत्तर प्रदेश २०१२, Baba Ramdev, betrayal of aam admi, Manmohan Confidence Vote, Mayawati, Narendra Modi, Nitin Gadkari, Two Indias, UPA-II Critical Appraisal, Uttar Pradesh Polls 2007 Archive, Uttar Pradesh Polls 2012

RSS Now Playing on Offstumped Live

  • On Third Front day dreams and Uttar Pradesh nightmares – Wrap up Podcast March 14, 2012
    A podcast conversation with  @dubash (http://phalaka.com) where we wrap up the Uttar Pradesh polls discussion with a look at the final numbers and analysis of vote shares. We also look ahead on all the buzz around Akhilesh Yadav, the rise of the Samajwadi Party and all of the day-dreaming over a possible Third Front Government [...]
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Opinions expressed on this site using the alias Offstumped are the blogger's personal opinions and do not in any way reflect the views of the blogger's Employers.