Saturday, May 16, 2009

400 Million Indians Say Yes We Can Too

Paradoxically, by returning the incumbent Manmohan Singh government to power, 400 million Indian voters have brought about one of the largest changes that Indian democracy has witnessed. And in the process, they have sent a strong message - Democracy works full stop.

This election, I believe, is a watershed election that has brought about three major changes, which have the potential of dramatically reshaping the Indian political landscape in the years to come. First, it has conclusively established that more than anything, development matters to Indian voters. So far, they had shown this by kicking out failed governments consistently - most of the time an incumbent government in each state lost elections. And in cases where they had kept governments in power in consecutive elections like that of Lalu Yadav in Bihar, these had been due to caste and religious concerns.

But in this election, not only did the voters punish failed governments, but they also rewarded governments that are generally considered to be promoting development in the states they govern. The voters had done this in previous elections by returning Digvijay Singh in MP, Chandrababu Naidu in AP, and Narendra Modi in Gujarat, but this time the number of incumbents rewarded for performace has been far more widespread - the Congress in Delhi and Andhra Pradesh, the DMK in Tamil Nadu, the BJP in Karnataka and Gujarat and the BJD in Orissa. On top of this, the Congress performed better than expected across the country as there was a general perception that the Manmohan Singh government had performed reasonably well, especially given the restrictions placed on it by the Left and other fissiparous allies.

To reinforce this point, voters continued to punish parties that have, currently or in the recent past, failed on the development front - Lalu Yadav's RJD in Bihar, the Akali Dal in Punjab, the SP in UP, and most spectacularly, the Left across the country. This dramatic rebuff to the Left is the biggest sign that the voters are interested in inclusive economic progress that increases incomes across the board rather than redistributive stagnation. They have seen what has happened in Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh and have compared it with what happens in West Bengal and Kerala, and have decided that they want more of the former and less of the latter.

I believe that this change has come about because in the last 20 years, more and more people have tasted the fruits of progress and the Indian middle class has been growing rapidly. This middle class, especially the young, who see the many opportunities that could be available to them if India continues on the path of economic progress, are driven less by ideology and more by pragmatic concerns about improving their and their families' economic well-being.

This brings me to the second key change in this election - the voters have rejected the politics of division by caste, religion and class. They rebuffed the SP and BSP in Uttar Pradesh in favour of Congress, they did not sway to Narendra Modi's exhortations outside of Gujarat (and even there delivered BJP fewer seats than expected), they rejected Lalu Prasad Yadav and Ram Vilas Paswan in Bihar, they rejected Vaiko in Tamil nadu, and they rejected the Left across the country. Therefore, while these divisions will not go away and narrow minded politicians will continue to exploit them, the voters have sent a message that development, rather than division is the path to political success.

The third key change is the strengthening of the national parties over the regional parties. The voters have voted for national stability and national unity. While the BJP has lost some seats compared to 2004, the combined total of the two national parties is higher than in 2004, and almost 60% of the total seats in the Lok Sabha. I hope this trend strengthens over time, and that there is a reduction in the fractiousness of the Indian polity. Some of this may come about by the merger of some of the smaller parties into the bigger ones, and some may come about as the national parties continue to strengthen their presence nationwide. In this sense, Rahul Gandhi was right to go it alone in UP, giving the Congress a base there that they can build on in future elections.

Where next?

For the Congress (and the rest of the UPA), they must redouble their efforts on inclusive growth, and accelerate the policy changes that can bring about this growth. Freed from the shackles imposed by the Left, they are well positioned to do this. And if they don't, they will not have an excuse when they go before the voters next time.

For the BJP, it must introspect and decide whether it wants to be a party of division or a party of development. It can never gain national acceptance as the former. As the latter, it has much more opportunity to grow nationally and pose a bigger challenge to the Congress, as it will have a wider base of support to draw upon, not just by growing as a party, but by reducing the number of potential allies who consider it untouchable. And they must start building the right set of next generation leaders who can take them forward. In this, they can take advantage of the fact that they are not led by a dynasty, and can therefore allow the best talent to emerge through internal democracy.

But all that is for tomorrow. Today, India has shown - Yes We Can Too.

2 comments:

Shyamal said...

An well written article. BJP faces the same problem as Republican party in the USA. Both have two factions : a free market,secular, affluent group and a religious fundamentalist, middle or lower middle class group. BJP wins only if these two factions can bring up some common agenda. BJP has the risk that if it sheds the Hindutva issue, it will be a clone of Congress. In that case, people will vote for the real one rather than the clone.
For Left's debacle in Bengal, please read my blog http://bharatdevelopment.blogspot.com.
Thanks,
Shyamal Pain
Missouri, USA

ganesh said...

The ground reality in India is different. Post-2004, the so-called reforms have been slowed down. Welfare programmes have come up due to the intervention of the Left parties, particular Communist Party of India(Marxist). For example, National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme through which the rural poor gets 100 days of employment in a year. Though many shortcomings are there in the implementation of the scheme, it has given a breathing space to the rural poor.

During the election campaign, the Congress did not campaign on reforms plank. It campaigned saying that they had brought a scheme that gave the employment to the poor. Infact, the Congress should thank the Left parties for having helped them to come back.

Another example is banking sector. Even the people in the government had agreed, the banking sector did not collapse because of the ownership nature. Since the banks are in public sector, unlike the American banks, they have survived the worst world economic crisis.

Congress could capitalise the inaction of the main opposition party, that is Bharathiya Janata Party(BJP). They had always side-stepped from the issues that affects the people.

If the Congress deviates from the trend that was set due to the pressure of the Left, they will start losing from the next state election itself.