Commentary/Janardan Thakur
Dr Sharma would definitely earn some more kudos if he were to call
the Bihar governor's bluff
Are governors behaving any differently now than they did in the
past? Why, people are asking, is the Bihar governor refusing to
give permission for prosecuting Laloo Prasad Yadav? Who
is holding his hand?
Not long ago, when Sheila Kaul felt obliged to quit as governor,
she left with the parting comment she was resigning from office
'to uphold the high principles of democracy and the dignity of
the governor's office.' Which was utterly ludicrous after the
way she had tried to stick to her post like a limpet. The dignity
of the governor's office has been besmirched for years and it
continues to be besmirched even now.
Way back in 1960, the Administrative Reforms Commission headed by M C Setalvad had observed
that a governor must be a person who by his ability, character
and behavior inspired respect: 'He must be able to display
perception and judgement and understanding of political and social
forces and on insight into human motives.... Above all he must
be impartial, and a person of unquestioned integrity...'
During her long years in politics, Indira Gandhi virtually stood
the recommendations on their head. Time and again she showed
she had no use for governors having qualities that inspired
respect. Whatever the place assigned to governor in the Constitution,
Indira saw them as no more than her personal agents in
various states.
She had her own criteria for choosing governors.
They had to be men/women of aristocratic taste, with the right
sense of colour and decor, the right table manners and so on that when she visited the state her aesthetic and social sensibilities
were not hurt. Or the governors had to be consummate manipulators
who could turn minorities into majorities or the other way round,
depending on what was required.
In short, Tapases were welcome. Or they had to be great courtiers.
Usually they were old retainers
or lackeys of the Nehru-Gandhi court who, over the years, became
such political liabilities they could only be removed to
cushy berths in Raj Bhavans or to embassies abroad. During his
last days, Lalit Narain Mishra had been under tremendous pressure
from Indira to accept a governorship. He had become too much of
a liability as a minister at the Centre, and his ambitions had
started getting the better of him. Mishra went and prayed at the
lady's feet: "You are my devi! Please don't deprive me of
your daily darshan." If only he had accepted the offer and
moved to some Raj Bhavan he would probably have been alive still.
The norms set by Indira for the selection of governors
were followed faithfully by her son and later by P V Narasimha
Rao, who had not only been trained in the Gandhi school but had
made important inputs to its curriculum. Barring some exceptions,
the men/women chosen to be governors were usually discredited
politicians who had made a name for themselves as polluters of
public life.
Dr Chenna Reddy was often described as the 'most
corrupt chief minister of India.' Even Congressmen who wallowed
in corruption were 'aghast' at the enormous wealth that
Dr Reddy had allegedly amassed for himself. When his corruption
stank to high heavens, Indira was left with no choice but to remove
him so that she could give a 'clean image' to her party
in Andhra Pradesh.
And what did she do with him? Sent him off
to the Raj Bhavan at Chandigarh.
When then Himachal Pradesh chief minister
Ram Lal set a record in corruption and became unacceptable to
Congressmen in his state, he too was rewarded with a governorship.
And you would remember what games Ram Lal than played in the Raj
Bhavan at Hyderabad.
Public memory is short, but surely it cannot be so short as to
have forgotten the dubious circumstances in which A P Sharma and
Bhishma Narain Singh were sacked from the central Cabinet. Those
were the days when Indira had suffered major reverses in the south
and was making desperate attempts to refurbish her government's
image. Both Sharma and Singh had to be removed from
the ministry. The corridor of power had hummed with stories of
what their dossiers contained. And so the axe came down: they
were sacrificed at the 'altar of purity.'
But then in the thinly-veiled monarchical system that prevailed,
it would have been most cruel of Indira to have totally
discarded such great loyalists who had stood by her in her darkest
hour. Wasn't it Bhishma Narain Singh who had spent money from his
own pocket (as he told people after he was sacked) to buy a bouquet
for Charan Singh on behalf of Indira who then happened to be in
jail? Surely it is not the way of largehearted kings and queens
to forget such thoughtful acts of their courtiers. A governorship
was the least that could be given to Singh.
As for A P Sharma,
the moment he heard he was being bundled out of the ministry
he suffered from a 'condition of the heart' and got himself moved
to a hospital. Such was Sharma's pathetic condition (not
physical) that Rajiv Gandhi thought it necessary to visit him
in hospital. Some of the scenes witnessed during his visit
were straight out of a Bombay movie: the Sharma family at Rajiv's
feet, imploring him to 'save Sharmaji.' He too was given
a Raj Bhavan.
There is perhaps another very good reason why governorship suits
some of the men/women chosen for the job. The post gives them
a constitutional shield, an immunity from being prosecuted without
clearance from the President, in other words from the home ministry.
Weren't Presidents supposed to be just rubber stamps? That some
of the Presidents have not acted true to form is a different matter.
When Narasimha Rao sought to delay Sheila Kaul's removal
from the Himachal Pradesh Raj Bhavan, surely he would not have
expected President Shankar Dayal Sharma to go public and
make his position untenable?
Did the President have to go out
of his way and say publicly that it was 'simply inconsistent
with the dignity of the high office of the governor of a state
and the dignity of the people of the relevant state that any governor
should have to be subjected to examination or interrogation by
the CBI in the context of material evidence gathered against that
governor'?
Prime ministers usually expect Presidents to sign on dotted lines
and when they don't they are considered 'troublesome'
or 'ungrateful' or both.
Sheila Kaul, mercifully, had to go, but what about the others
who are still making a mockery of their high position? Dr Sharma would definitely earn
some more kudos if he were
to call the Bihar governor's bluff. That would be some parting
gift to the nation. Surely Dr Sharma has nothing to lose now.
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