Commentary/Janardan Thakur
How long will this cabaret go on?
How long can the 13-party cabaret go on?
Nobody seems to know for sure, at least of all the constituents of the United Front.
The government is at crosspurposes with itself, if not at war.
The prime minister makes announcement that his ministers have
no linking of. The home minister, Indrajit Gupta, does not know
what the prime minister is doing with his files or who he is going
to get as his deputy.
The Cabinet meets, takes decisions, and
then it goes various ways. One minister agrees to a decision jointly
taken, another flays it in public. One part of the government
wants a socialist economy, another wants to pull to the right
of Manmohan Singh, One part of the government believes in Lohia
and Mandal, another in Marx and E M S Namboodiripad, yet another
in Adam Smith and the World Bank. And there is quite another part
that just believes in Narasimha Rao and his like. This is no government
of consensus, it is a stop gap compromise and nobody knows what
they are stopping or compromising for.
The show gets curiouser and curiouser. One day CPI-M Politburo
member Sitaram Yechuri hits out against the prime minister of
carrying his entire clan with him on foreign jaunts, and the next
day the CPI-M boss, Harkishen Singh Surjeet says that is not the
party's view. The party hardly has any face to criticise Deve Gowda,
for how would it defend similar junkets by Jyoti Basu?
Contradictions abound. The Left is against what it calls Congress
clones like P Chidambaram and on the other hand Congress clones
like P Chidambaram can barely stand the justice of the Janata
Dal and the Samajwadi Party. The Janata Dal and the Samajwadi
Party have their own reason to be unhappy: They think what is
essentially their show is being run by rank outsiders, the main
outsider being Prime Minister Deve Gowda himself.
People have seen catch as catch can governments during the great
Congress raj, but their leaders knew what they wanted and they
mostly got what they wanted, by hook or by crook. Here now is
a government of push-as-push-can and pull-as-pull-can. Between the
pushing and the pulling, little gets done.
Nearly all the institutions have collapsed or are in the process
of collapsing. Which is why people sit up and begin to applaud
when they behave the way they are supposed to in the normal course.
The courts punishing the guilty becomes an event of national celebration,
the due process of law earns itself an exaggerated sobriquet:
Judicial Activism.
What is so unusual about prime ministers and
ministers being brought to book for wrongdoing? What is so special
about bureaucrats being asked to be honest and accountable? What
is so out of place about a man doing what he is paid to do? What
is so special is that men and women and the institutions they
run have rarely done what they were supposed to do?
Parliament
can barely get to pass legislation, ministers write tainted orders
on their official letterheads and put their signatures on them,
bureaucrats doctor each other's reports to please this master
or that, to climb this rung or that. That is why the applause
when someone is found not doing all that. That is why the applause
for the judiciary.
The other day a commentator likened New Delhi to a stage crawling
with characters in search of a play and a play in search of a
plot. 'Nobody knows what to do next, nobody knows what happens
next, nobody knows whose part ends where. Nobody knows when the
curtains will fall. Who, after all, is H D Deve Gowda but a character
who does not know what character he is? He came on stage accidentally,
he could tumble out of it equally accidentally. He wears the prime
minister's cap but the cap is actually more important than the
man wearing it. It is nobody's fault that Deve Gowda is prime
minister. It will be nobody's fault if he is prime minister no
more.'
The other major players on stage, Narasimha Rao and Sitaram
Kesri, are heading for a war, but then who knows what they might
do next? Could they strike a deal together? Or would they keep
going their separate ways? You get the most diverse views: 'Kesri
could dump Deve Gowda, stick to Deve Gowda, woo back the Tamil
Maanila Congress and the Tiwari Congress, fling them farther away,
swing to the Left, swing to the Right.' He could do just
about anything. As long as these leaders can remain on stage,
they will try all manner of combinations and permutations. Abhi
tamasha chalu hai!
In the meantime, the growing fashion among politicians is to debunk
the media and thumb noses at journalists. Some, like Kanshi Ram
and Mayawati, see no harm in even thrashing up mediapersons if
what they write does not suit them. The late Gundu Rao used to
describe newsmen as 'curs' and another former Congress
chief minister, Dr Jagannath Mishra had come close to passing
a press bill to curb the freedom of the press.
And now, Prime
Minister Deve Gowda's contempt for the press and the news media
is becoming more and more evident. Soon after he became prime
minister he had rebuked some Delhi journalists, saying that they
had not even bothered to come for his press conferences when he
used to come to Delhi as the Karnataka chief minister, so why
were they so eager to meet him now?
Deve Gowda can be very unpleasant
when he wants to, and indeed he seldom has a happy look on his
face. He is good at mocking people, and in telling them off. The
other day he ordered journalists covering the CBI conference to
leave the hall as he wanted to speak to the officers in private.
It may have been his prerogative to do so, but it certainly
did not leave a good impression on the media.
The prime minister has been fuming against the press ever since
reports on the junkets appeared. He was angry with his press adviser
for not having stopped the publication of the reports. Then came
criticism from another quarter: CPI-M Politburo member Sitaram Yechuri
created waves by attacking the prime minister had declared nonchalantly
that all the expenses on the trip of his family members had been
paid 'to the last paisa.'
Yechuri was obviously not
satisfied. He wanted to know who had paid the money and where it came
from. As though rubbing salt into the wound, Yechury remarked:
'A humble farmer can have very wealthy relations...'
He even referred to Deve Gowda flying to Bangalore in a Reliance plane
soon after being chosen to lead the United Front government at
the Centre. That was 'a very wrong thing,' said Yechuri.
'Politicians must not have associations with industrial houses.'
Surjeet has now come to the prime minister's aid, but his surely
is not the end of the story. Deve Gowda has begun saying he came to
Delhi with just two suitcases and he could well return to Bangalore
with his two suitcases!
Illustration: Dominic Xavier
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