Can Jayalalitha stage a political comeback in Tamil Nadu?
N Sathya Moorthy in Madras
Aides and associates are polite on the phone -- and in person.
None of the callousness, crudity and contempt of the past when
the master of the house was the all-powerful chief minister of
Tamil Nadu, and the unquestioned supremo of the ruling All-India
Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam. The election results
of April 1996 have made a difference, so has the realisation that
the public is still fed up with her: not even a dog barked as
the successor Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam government of her political bete noire M Karunanidhi
arrested her on a string of corruption charges on December 6.
It all ends there, though. Jayalalitha is still inaccessible to
individual journalists, and independent opinions within her party
hierarchy. She continues to meet only those whom she wants to
meet, not those who want to meet her. Shunning her past practice
of the 'powerful days', she has started meeting with the press
as a group. But past habits die hard, and these press meets are
few and far between even now. Obviously, Jayalalitha does not
want to be embarrassed or harassed by pen-pushers, and chooses the
questions she wants to answer and ignores those that relate to
her one-time live-in confidante and controversial 'foster sister',
Sasikala Natarajan.
Where from here for the AIADMK supremo? Her party has split vertically
in the days following the 1996 elections. As irony would have
it, all those who had worked with her in her heydays, all those
who had benefited from her largesse of the political variety and
otherwise, are the ones who are arraigned against her, as the
rebel AIADMK, staking their claims to the party flag, symbol and
title. And those whom she had shunned at the height of her glorious
days, like former minister S Thirunavukkarasu and controversial
former speaker, "sky-high-power" P H Pandian are back in her
fold.
Does it mean a weakening of her power-base, or not? Will her arrest
and subsequent expose of her large collection of jewellery and
sarees, and the assets and properties that the Sasikala family
acquired during Jayalalitha's chief ministership, haunt her into
the future, or not?
For starters, Jayalalitha's problems, particularly of the electoral
variety, stemmed form a wrong understanding of the evolving political
situation of the day. Fed on the 'MGR myth' of AIADMK founder
and her political mentor, the late M G Ramachandran, and on his
conviction that the Tamil Nadu voters would not go back to the
DMK under Karunanidhi, Jayalalitha though that her day had been
made when the DMK was trounced in the 1991 elections, following
the Rajiv Gandhi assassination.
She saw it as a continued assertion of a new generation of Tamil
Nadu voters, that they would have none of the DMK, or the Karunanidhi
leadership. Possibly, she was thus let to believe that the voter
antipathy towards the DMK would continue for another decade and
more, just as it had happened with the party's defeat in the 1977
polls that returned the AIADMK to power under MGR.
That's where her mistakes began: on a wrong interpretation of
the voter verdict. Fuelling a secret ambition of wanting to become
a national leader of some eminence, if not the prime minister
of India, Jayalalitha obviously charted out on the course that
contemporary politicians think is a 'must' for any long-term survival
and political climb-up. Amassing wealth, that is.
In the process, Jayalalitha, and her aides and cohorts seemed
to have forgotten the masses, their very existence, and also the
existence of their soul and being. With the Congress down in the
dumps for long, and in no position to challenge her authority
in the early days of the P V Narasimha Rao prime ministership,
when it was in power at the Centre only at the mercy of friendly
parties like the AIADMK, Jayalalitha took little notice of the
masses, their views and moods, expectations and grievances. She
had concluded that they would not go back to the equally cadre-based
DMK, and had no option but the AIADMK, even in a worse-case scenario
for her party.
That's what the voter has proved as wrong. He would rather have
a chastised Karunanidhi back in power, rather than continue with
the arrogance of Jayalalitha team. He would rather assert his
supremacy in silence every five years, when the opportunity presented
itself, rather than take to the streets on the spur of the moment,
when he felt cheated, when he felt neglected, when he felt ignored
by those whom he had chosen to run the government of the state
for him.
And on this basic tenet, hinges the political future of Jayalalitha.
As much as it hinges on the spate of corruption charges filed
against her. If she is held guilty, these chances are that she
may have to go to prison, and she may thus have to be debarred
from contesting the elections for five years after her release.
But the 'political animal' that she is, Jayalalitha seems to have
provided enough legal loopholes for a possible escape route, if
one presented itself. Other than the minuscule moneys involved
in the cases already registered, nothing is heard of the large
sums that had been allegedly siphoned off during her tenure.
Most of the properties that had been unearthed stands in the names
of Sasikala and her family members -- and if they own it up all,
a court may find it not so easy to punish Jayalalitha under Section
13 of the Prevention of Corruption Act, where benami (pseudonyms) holdings of a 'public servant' are also covered.
Enough powers had been vested in Sasikala at the time that all
the irregularities committed by her could be interpreted to have
been done without the chief minister's knowledge and permission.
That's if Sasikala owns up -- and sticks to it.
Which may be an easy way out, legally. That's if the courts have
enough reasons to accept it as such. But will it mean that the
voters would accept the interpretation? Jayalalitha seems to have
developed a tactic of 'managing' the politicians and bureaucrats
in distant Delhi, and concluding that this alone is enough for
her political survival. This was what kept her going at the height
of her adversarial times in office, but this was also her political undoing
at the hustings.
There is no denying that most of the 22 per cent voters who went
with the AIADMK in April last are still with her. The arrests,
expose and criminal cases have not changed them much. For one
thing, they had known it all even while voting her. For another,
they mostly belonged to the 'MGR days', and would not have Karunanidhi rule the State.
But their numbers are dwindling, with each passing generation.
That's precisely the reason -- the influx of a new generation
of voters born in the 1970s when the DMK last ruled, or misruled
the state -- that the DMK could roll back to power last year.
For these voters, the misdeeds of the AIADMK government mattered
more than the memories of their parents.
Jayalalitha has age on her side. Compared to Karunanidhi and
Tamil Maanila Congress (TMC) leader G K Moopanar, leading the
majority splinter group of the state unit of the Congress since
March last, she is much younger -- and thus has a longer political
innings ahead. A lot may depend on the criminal cases pending
against her, and the course that these cases may ultimately take.
Even if the courts acquit her, there is no guarantee that the
people would accept her.
Maybe, Jayalalitha can console herself, citing the Karunanidhi
example. If the DMK could be returned to power after the defeat
of 1991, why not the AIADMK after the 1996 trouncing? There are
subtle differences, though. For one thing, no one had complained
that Karunanidhi was personally involved in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination, or anyone from his party was associated, either. The charge was one of his government being sympathetic towards the LTTE.
Against Jayalalitha, it's one of corruption charges, arrogant
administration, and unlawful activities involving bodily harm
to political adversaries. All personally identified with these
in power, then. People could suo motu accept that Karunanidhi had
little control over the LTTE, and the Tigers would have done what
all they did, even without a sympathetic government this side
of the Palk Straits. Which is not the case with all those corrupt
and lawless ministers under Jayalalitha. They could not have done
what they did without the blessings of the chief minister.
For all her ambitions and fighting spirit, she has not yielded
any ground thus far after the polls -- Jayalalitha is still shy
of going to the people. True, they have not approved of her ways
as chief minister, but there is nothing personal in it. She would
rather confabulate with her lawyers and political shenanigans,
rather than meet with party cadres and the public at large --
a promise she made after the poll defeat, but has not bothered
to keep since.
Starting from the late Kamaraj, the Tamil voters have not bothered
about those who had not bothered about them, in turn. That one
thing will continue to bother them in Jayalalitha's case, and
it will take more than a man's work -- woman's work in this case
-- to bring them around, even slowly, if not swiftly.
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