Commentary/Fuzail Jafferey
The United Front government is heading for a collapse
The main plank on which the general elections to the 11th Lok
Sabha were fought in early 1996 was not corruption in public life
but political stability. Almost all major parties and combinations
of parties contended that only a stable government could bring
economic growth and prosperity to the country. After the elections, though the Bharatiya Janata Party emerged
as the single largest party -- for the first time after Independence
the Congress was pushed down to second position in Parliament -- it
fell short of an absolute majority which could have enabled
it to form a government.
The BJP, however, responded in a positive manner to the invitation
by President Shankar Dayal Sharma and formed its first
ever government at the Centre under the leadership of Atal Bihari
Vajpayee, who, in spite of his right-wing political affiliations,
is regarded as the most respectable national leader and a seasoned
statesman. The BJP leaders had hoped to muster enough support
from other parties, particularly the regional outfits, on the basis
of a common programme. With this objective in mind, Vajpayee, in his very first address to Parliament as prime minister, categorically
assured that his government would strictly adhere to the Indian
Constitution and would not rake up contentious issues such as
the Muslim personal law, Article 370, and the construction of a
temple in Ayodhya.
The Congress, feeling threatened by the
emergence of the BJP as a national alternative, and the Left parties
which have serious ideological differences with the BJP, however,
joined hands to topple the 13-day-old Vajpayee government, who
gracefully opted out without forcing a vote of confidence in the
house. Thus came into existence on June 1, 1996, the coalition
government led by H D Deve Gowda -- a self-proclaimed humble farmer
from Karnataka. The United Front government
has 13 constituents, some of whom had fought the
elections against one another, and depends on the
outside support of the Congress for its survival. In fact, the Front government will not last even for a day if the Congress withdraws support.
According to the common man's perception, the United Front government is fast heading towards collapse. During the formation of the United Front government, the Communist Party of India (Marxist) had played a significant role
in bringing the coalition partners together and chalking out a
common minimum programme, which was supposed to be the basis
of the day-to-day functioning of the government.
It is a common knowledge that the CPI-M has grown so fearful of the BJP's challenge that it willingly compromised
its age-old policy commitments and ideological preferences
just to keep the BJP out of power.
Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda has not only pushed the so-called common minimum programme into the cold
storage for good but has also made it clear that he cannot
consult his coalition partners on each and every issue and that
he must take decisions in his capacity as the chief executive
of the country. The utmost arrogance of the "humble farmer"
can be gauged from the fact that he did not consider it fit to
take into confidence even federal Home Minister Indrajit Gupta
on vital issues such as reimposing President's
rule in Uttar Pradesh. Also, the appointment of Romesh
Bhandari as governor of Uttar Pradesh was made against the wishes and advice of the two communist parties.
The CPI-M's hope that the common minimum programme would be the panacea of all the ills and problems of the Indian masses have been totally belied by the Deve Gowda government in
which people like C M Ibrahim, with a dubious background, are preferred to men of proven sincerity and integrity
such as Indrajit Gupta and Chaturanan Mishra. The prime minister
himself seems to be more interested in sheer politicking rather than making any sincere efforts to give a good governance to the
country. The promise of enacting a law reserving 33 per
cent seats in Parliament for women and creating a separate
Uttarakhand state, and then cunningly backtracking on both the
issues are glaring examples of the Deve Gowda brand of politics.
Moreover, during the past seven months, people's sufferings have increased due to unemployment and inflation, causing a steep rise in the prices of essential commodities. Since the advent
of the Green Revolution in the mid-1970s, India could always
rely on its food surplus, but now, thanks to the inefficient
present government, we have to import wheat in spite of a good monsoon.
Similarly, industrial growth has not only considerably declined,
but according to the captains of industry, the country is on the
verge of a recession.
When the United Front government was formed, Deve
Gowda and his supporters had promised a time-bound programme
for the supply of drinking water, poverty alleviation, health
care, and housing for the people. But no one knows as to when these
populist promises will be implemented. Wherever the prime minister
goes, he makes announcements involving millions of rupees for the
development of the region. But most of the projects that have
actually taken off are restricted to Karnataka and, more particularly,
to Hassan, Deve Gowda's home town.
It is due to the general conduct and performance of the Deve Gowda
government that the CPI-M, which refused to join the government, has now started distancing itself from
the United Front. Its leadership is now criticising not only the
economic policies of the government, which are by and large dictated
by the IMF/World Bank, but is also concerned with the
lack of transparency and accountability on the part of the government.
Even under such circumstances, those who feel that there is no
alternative to a full term for the government because no party or MP wants another election are sadly mistaken. The BJP leaders want a mid-term poll at which they can easily exploit the crying failures of the present
government to their electoral advantage. But
for the severe jolt that the BJP suffered in Gujarat at the hands
of its one time 'disciplined soldier' Shankarsinh Waghela, followed
by its electoral reverses in Uttar Pradesh, the party by now would
have forced the central government to announce fresh general elections.
As far as the Congress is concerned, it stands thoroughly discredited
and disunited. It will not opt for a midterm poll unless it feels
sure of defeating the BJP and regaining its pre-eminence in Indian
politics. At the same time it cannot support the United Front
for five years which will only mean its own liquidation in
due course. If the new Congress president, Sitaram Kesri, is successful
in grabbing the leadership of the Congress Parliamentary Party
as well, he will lose no time in disowning his party's
present obligation to the United Front. Once he is able to set
the Congress Bhavan in order, with or without the support of
Sonia Gandhi, he will have little qualms in booting out
the combination of 13 disparate parties which is stumbling from one crisis to other.
After consolidating
his position within the party, the wily politician from Bihar
may not face much difficult in roping in G K Moopanar's Tamil Manilla
Congress and the ruling Telugu Desam faction led by Chandrababu Naidu to join a new coalition government at the Centre with
the Congress replacing the Janata Dal. Both Moopanar and Naidu must
not have forgotten nor forgiven the humiliation they had to
suffer at the hands of Janata Dal leaders before and during the
general elections. The Congress can also find another powerful
ally in Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav who has
already expressed his disillusionment with the United Front led
by H D Deve Gowda.
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