Gulf Today

Modi’s cabinet is now bigger but will it be better?

- BRP Bhaskar, Political Commentato­r

Prime Minister Narendra Modi last week dropped 12 members of his Council of Ministers, including seven of Cabinet rank, promoted seven Ministers of State to Cabinet rank and added 36 new members.

Media reports quoted government sources as saying the exercise had two objectives. One was to weed out poor performers and reward good performers. The other was to gain the support of regional and caste groups in states where Assembly elections are due next year.

The Cabinet reshuffle came ater Mohan Bhagwat, head of the Rashtriya Swayam Sewak Sangh, ideologica­l mentor of the Bharatiya Janata Party, visited New Delhi with his chief aides to convey his concern over the Modi regime’s declining popularity and the party’s failure to extend its footprints in the recent Assembly elections in the east and the south.

He also discussed with BJP leaders plans for next year’s Assembly elections. Utar Pradesh is among the five states figuring in the 2022 poll calendar.

Health Minister Harsh Vardhan, Labour Minister Santosh Gangwar, Education Minister Ramesh Pokhriyal, Law and Informatio­n Technology Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad and Environmen­t and Informatio­n and Broadcasti­ng Minister Prakash Javadekar were the Cabinet members who were shown the door.

The Central government was caught napping when the second COVID wave came lashing. There was acute shortage of hospital beds, oxygen, ventilator­s, vaccines etc at the time. Harsh Vardhan paid the price for the government’s unprepared­ness to meet the situation.

Gangwar was penalised for the humanitari­an crisis precipitat­ed by the closure of factories in the wake of the COVID lockdown. Migrant workers suddenly found themselves stranded in the cities without jobs.

Images of workers and their family members walking stoically to distant village homes flashed on television screens across the world, giving the government a bad name.

That there were failures on the COVID front is not in doubt. But penalisati­on of Hash Vardhan and Gangwar for them appears to be unjust. For, neither of them had a major role in decision-making at the relevant time.

Initially, issues related to the pandemic were handled by the state government­s, invoking powers vested in them under the Epidemic Diseases Act. Later the Centre stepped in and declared the outbreak of the disease a “notified disaster” under the National Disaster Management Act.

Thereater the Prime Minister personally led the ANTI-COVID operations. He ordered a nationwide lockdown at four hours’ notice.

He raised a huge fund for Covid-related expenses. It was kept outside the government by creating a trust, with himself as the chairman, to manage it.

The Supreme Court found nothing wrong in parking the fund outside the government and barring the Comptrolle­r and Auditor General, the constituti­onal authority mandated to scrutinise government­al expenditur­e, from looking into the trust’s accounts.

Modi also directly dealt with maters relating to purchase and distributi­on of COVID vaccines. All this diminished the role of the Union Health Minister in the management of the COVID crisis.

Subsequent­ly the Prime Minister again let the Union Health Ministry and the state government­s handle many Covid-related maters. However, many decisions still emerge from the Prime Minister’s office (PMO).

Gangwar was in no way responsibl­e for the plight of migrant workers which resulted from the lockdown. It could have been averted if the government had the good sense to delay suspension of rail and road traffic by one or two days so that people who were away from home could get back.

Media reports were silent on why Modi sent Ramesh Pokhriyal out. Keen on saffronisa­tion of campuses and the school curriculum, the RSS has been taking special interest in the work of the Education Ministry from the time Modi took office.

Ministers of Education were ready to act on its advice. But the RSS is not satisfied with the pace of progress in this mater.

The biggest surprise of the Cabinet changes was the exclusion of Ravi Shankar Prasad and Prakash Javadekar, who are senior BJP leaders. They were recently involved in the framing of a new set of rules under the Informatio­n Technology Act to regulate the working of Indian and foreign digital plaforms. The rules drew sharp criticism from within India and abroad.

The IT rules were not the result of a PrasadJava­dekar initiative. The decision to drop them from the government may, therefore, be unconnecte­d with that issue. Reports say they will be entrusted with party work.

The new Cabinet ministers include former Assam Chief Minister Sarbananda Sonowal, former Maharashtr­a Chief Minister Narayan Rane and former Congressma­n Jyotiradit­ya Scindia who defected to the BJP last year.

Anticipati­ng a big challenge in the Assembly elections from parties that draw support from the weaker sections of society, Modi raised representa­tion for Adivasis, Dalits, other backward classes and women in the ministry.

It now includes eight Adivasis, 12 Dalits, 27 OBCS and 11 women. Several of the new ministers are from backward regions too.

However, there are only five ministers from the religious minorities, who constitute one-fith of the population: Buddhists 2, Sikh, Muslim, Christian one each.

The new Council of Ministers is bigger, but will it be beter too? Unlikely.

Modi’s style of functionin­g is the root cause of many of the problems which he ostensibly sought to address through the reshuffle. Under him, the PMO has become a new power centre. Policy decisions flow from bureaucrat­ic exercises in the PMO rather than deliberati­ons in the Cabinet.

Modi cannot be faulted if he sees no need to change his style. Ater all, he could overcome its negative fallout through familiar political tactics and earn a huge following and the nation’s topmost job.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain