The evidence of
humour
The fulcrum of a
tipping point in public life is that mortal enemy of a politician: humour. A
joke might not destroy reputation quite as effectively as a corruption scandal,
but it deflates credibility. Through his long career Defence Minister A.K.
Antony has been wise enough never to get tempted by a wisecrack; wit is not his
forte. He might therefore be a little bewildered by the artillery fire of jokes
after his disastrous mismanagement of the border incident in which five Indian
soldiers lost their lives. Such humour has a memory. The voter will remember “Pakistan
has two deadly weapons: AK-47 and A.K. Antony”.
If it is any
consolation to Antony, jokes about Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Mrs Sonia
Gandhi are far more harsh. As we leap-frog our way towards another general
election, Congress might discover that its biggest problem is ridicule.
It does not matter
now when the next general election is held. We are in the last chapter of a
drama that has gone on too long. The life of this government is over; dreaming
of resurrection on a deathbed is a waste of time. For most of this term, policy
was lost in a swamp. Now, decisions are made to serve as slogans.
If Congress had
truly believed in Telangana, it would have completed the process three years
ago, used this time to absorb reaction and respond by showcasing the practical
merits of its decision. An announcement now is mercenary: to milk the
environment for what votes it can bring, and postpone ensuing problems. The
timing is determined not by advantage to the people but by thoughts of benefit
to the party.
But politics is
not a parlour game, even when the parlour is as charming as one in a spacious
Delhi bungalow. All that Telangana has managed to achieve so far is to split
the Congress, spur rage on the Andhra street, and provide more fodder to
separatist banners. The dispute over Telangana has generated a dispute over
Hyderabad. The second can become as chronic as the first. What was intended as
a win-win situation could become a lose-lose scenario.
Likewise, nothing
stopped UPA from passing food security legislation in the first six months of
its second term, rather than the last six months, except fear that
implementation would expose inadequacies of the project. Congress spin-masters
still believe that this will help revive a formula that was brilliantly
effective in a year when most of the present electorate was not born: 1971. Mrs
Indira Gandhi won a tremendous victory that year with a simple proposition: Woh kehte hain Indira hatao, main kehti hoon
garibi hatao [They (meaning those opposed to her) say remove Indira, I say
remove poverty].
A promise is only
as good as the worth of its trust. In 1971, Mrs Indira Gandhi was not enveloped
by the odour of corruption, including within her own family. The poor believed
that she would usher in an Indian version of socialism that would end their
misery. No one laughed at Mrs Indira Gandhi, or indeed her defence minister,
except at his own peril. There are other reasons for scepticism. Congress has
been in power for three of the four decades since 1971, in sustained spells
rather than the sporadic bursts of V.P. Singh, Chandrashekhar, Deve Gowda or
Inder Gujral. Indira Gandhi’s promise is still a dream.
Every election is
another gate towards the future, not a backdoor to the past. We must solve
inherited problems, of course, the most important of which is surely poverty.
But this needs an economic programme that takes change forward in quantum
leaps, not throwaway sops. In 2009, UPA won handsome endorsement because voters
believed that if it got five more years, it would create a new India. Five
years have passed. We are staring instead at a very old India, one we imagined
we had shed in the folds of the past, weighed down with cynicism, its middle
class ill with angst rather than alive with the vibrant optimism that was the
story of the first decade of this century.
The dark side of
today’s political satire is the evil of corruption. There is a school within
the ruling establishment selling the theory that corruption as an election
issue has been deflected. This is delusion. The voter is not going to be
finessed by the argument that all politicians are corrupt, and so theft of the
present lot should be condoned. A jury can punish only the person in the dock,
and the present government is on trial in the next electoral court.
Jokes are the
evidence and the argument in this trial; the voter is both lawyer and judge in
the court of the people. But there is some good news for those on trial. The
maximum sentence is just five years in wilderness. The next five years will
pass as quickly as the last five.
No comments:
Post a Comment