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Commentary/ Mani Shakar Aiyar

If Gujral can count well, he'll let the Congress in

Stability of governance depends wholly on the logic of arithmetic. His United Front is like a pyjama cord: So long as it remains knotted, it will hold his government up; the minute the knot slips, the United Front becomes the united front.

The United Front is a figment of imagination - and expediency. Rajiv Gandhi famously described V P Singh's National Front as a national affront. The United Front Is a notional front. It is more notional today than it was ten months ago when, for want of a candidate, it foisted the hapless and wholly inappropriate Deve Gowda on a bemused nation.

Where Nehru said "While the world sleeps, India awakes to life and freedom," Deve Gowda slept his way through his tryst with destiny. The only thing that became him was the manner of his going. In his last hurrah, the Kulak from Hassan bared his fangs as only a vengeful Kulak can - and specifically targeted Gujral.

Deve Gowda's intimate knowledge of the dregs in his cup of sorrow had led him unerringly to discerning who his successor would be at a time when most political activists and analysts were rating Moopanar's chances as brighter.

Deve Gowda warned Gujral about usurping his - Deve Gowda's - gaddi (throne). Gujral has not heeded the warning. Indeed, Gujral's eminent suitability for the post is in such sharp contrast to Deve Gowda's pathetic unsuitability for it that, before the end of the forthcoming budget session, Deve Gowda would be forgotten by everyone - except Deve Gowda.

And that is when Deve Gowda will strike. He will find many allies within the United (Ho! Ho!) Front: Laloo, certainly; Paswan, of course; Mulayam, possibly; Jena, yes, there is an off-chance; and, when the momentum gathers pace, Chandrababu, even Mahanta.

Whatever Gujral's persuasive skills, and however much he might bend this way and that to accommodate now this one and now the other, I stake his reputation on the line by predicting that the United Front would come apart at the seams within six months.

In fact, I am prepared to even wager the subject on which the process of disintegration will set in: the Cauvery waters dispute. The Supreme Court, in the dying days of the Deve Gowda government, ordered the federal government to proceed with the implementation of the Cauvery Tribunal's interim award.

If Gujral does as told, the TMC will cheer - and Deve Gowda will jeer. If he does not, Deve Gowda will embrace Gujral but Moopanar (whose untold acres all lie in the Cauvery delta) will have to strike - or be struck at.

I will go wrong in this prognostication only if any one of the other mines with which Gujral's path is strewn were to blow up first: the fodder scam; the Indian Bank scam; the forthcoming interim Jain Commission report; it will take up a whole column to list all the barely-buried grenades.

There is only one way Gujral can protect himself from his friends in the Front. And that is to get the Congress into his government.

Congress support to Gujral is total - whether from without or within. The problem, however, with outside support is that those without can do nothing about disputes within. But if the Congress, like the camel in the story, is within, the fireworks being stored up in various UF cupboards could turn out to be damp squibs.

For the ingress of close on a hundred and fifty Congress supporters of Gujral would so alter the arithmetic of the coalition that tiny groups of 10 and 20 members would no longer have the menacing aspect they flaunt today.

Once the Congress is in, Deve Gowda or Laloo or Mulayam or Moopanar might huff and might puff - but they will not be able to blow the house down.

A hundred and forty Congressmen will, in the mathematics of governance, always be seven times the number of 20 TMCwallahs!

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