Deccan Chronicle

Does PM Modi have an ideology?

- Aakar Patel Aakar Patel is a writer, columnist and executive director of Amnesty Internatio­nal (India)

Does the Prime Minister have an ideology? This might be a strange question to ask because his party’s website advertises its ideology and gives it a name: Hindutva. But it needs to be asked because one of our most intelligen­t politician­s has said that the party doesn’t have a proper ideology. Former finance minister P. Chidambara­m was asked a question by a business daily on “where he would place the BJP in its philosophi­cal interpreta­tion of the role of the State as a promoter of welfare, provider of health and education for furthering equality or a complete laissez-faire approach?”

This is not a simple question to answer. Laissez-faire is an approach where the government does not participat­e in the economy and lets private players run everything. This can roughly be described as a society which people like Ayn Rand wrote about, in which heroic capitalist­s make the world better through competitio­n, and the incompeten­t government does not meddle, leaving even health and education to the private sector and letting citizens fend for themselves.

During the 2014 campaign, it was suggested that Narendra Modi might be advocating such a system, which was different from the “socialism” that was favoured by the Congress. Of course, what has come to be in the last three years is that the “socialist” schemes like MNREGA, etc, that Mr Modi promised to shut down he has left intact. There seems to be no difference between the National Democratic Alliance’s approach to the role of the State and the approach of the United Progressiv­e Alliance under Manmohan Singh.

This is what Mr Chidambara­m challenged in his reply. He said: “The BJP does not have a core economic ideology or philosophy. The BJP’s core ideology is only Hindutva and majoritari­an government. Any government must have a core economic philosophy that would give an indication of where it stands in the Left-to-Right spectrum. The BJP has, as a party, never reflected on its place in terms of the Left-toRight spectrum of economic philosophy. Therefore, it is wandering all over the place.”

One can read these as harsh words from an adversary. But though I am not a Congress voter, I think it is important to examine where Mr Chidambara­m is going with this. He said: “Contrast the Congress’ approach, and I would be the first to admit that there were many deficienci­es in the implementa­tion of the programmes. But the Congress placed emphasis on three or four issues which defined its core philosophy. First of all, nobody should die of hunger or starvation. That is why we brought the MNREGA and the National Food Security Act.”

The other issues he adds as the defining ones are — pregnant women, lactating mothers, infants and under-five children, interventi­ons in health, including the immunisati­on programme and the National Rural Health Mission. Mr Chidambara­m says that “these interventi­ons defined the Congress’ core beliefs and philosophy” and adds that such specific direction is absent in Mr Modi’s outlook.

Pointing to a report that 282 children died in Gorakhpur, he said: “It is not impacting the Central government. It is not impacting the UP government. It is not moving anyone’s heart... To them, lighting up Varanasi on Diwali and building a temple that exemplify their Hindutva philosophy are more important than infant/maternal mortality, malnutriti­on or hunger.”

The question is not whether the UPA was better at governance than the NDA, Mr Chidambara­m is accepting his government’s flaws. The question is: does the BJP and specifical­ly the Prime Minister have an ideology and a vision from which their actions are emanating? Or is Mr Chidambara­m correct in saying that there is no coherent narrative that is holding together all the grand initiative­s.

Make in India, Swachchh Bharat, demonetisa­tion, surgical strike, bullet train, Start Up India, GST: are these all part of something grand and whole? Or are they individual parts with no meaning attached to them and no linkages with one another? This is a troubling question that all of us, including BJP voters, need to ask.

The Congress says it tried to focus on certain specific problems. It was unable to convince us, rightly, that it was competent at executing them, even if the intention may have been right. That is behind us now. It is the turn of the BJP to explain what it is seeking to do and what the grand plan is. Personally I hope Mr Chidambara­m is wrong, and that there is some focused thinking going on in the NDA on what its five year and 10 year achievemen­ts should be.

Because if the “ideology” is just Hindutva, meaning cattle slaughter, temple issue, love jihad, joined with random acts on the side of economics and foreign policy then we are in deeper trouble than we think.

Make in India, Swachchh Bharat, demonetisa­tion, bullet train, GST: are these all part of something grand and whole? Or are they individual parts with no meaning attached to them and no linkages with one another?

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