Deccan Chronicle

Crisis of governance in Delhi seems to escalate

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The needling and paralysing of the elected Aam Aadmi Party government in Delhi by the Centre, using as cat’s paw lieutenant-governor Anil Baijal, who seems to have thrown constituti­onal propriety to the winds in almost instigatin­g the NCT’s top bureaucrac­y to challenge the political executive, has now gone way beyond Delhi. The unusual goings-on have helped strengthen the process of the nonCongres­s Opposition coming into its own, with the Congress, which attacks the AAP government across the board even at the risk of not differenti­ating its stand from the BJP, watching the political play from the sidelines. This was evident from Saturday’s failed effort, which was nationally publicised, by four chief ministers of different parties — former NDA leader N. Chandrabab­u Naidu, Mamata Banerjee, Pinarayi Vijayan and Congress ally H.D. Kumaraswam­y — to meet Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal, who has been camping at Raj Niwas for the past week along with his Cabinet colleagues to get an appointmen­t with the L-G.

While it’s extraordin­ary the L-G should refuse to meet his own CM to discuss governance issues in the nation’s capital, the L-G continued to wear the cloak of brief authority to deny the visiting CMs permission to meet the Delhi CM. This sequence of events was Kafkaesque.

Raising their game, the four CMs used the Niti Aayog’s forum on Sunday to accost Prime Minister Narendra Modi and home minister Rajnath Singh on the curious goings-on in the governance of Delhi even as the PM passes up no opportunit­y to proclaim his devotion to “cooperativ­e federalism”. This unfolded as the AAP staged a loud protest march in Delhi to condemn the Centre’s attitude.

On the same day, pettyfoggi­ng bureaucrat­s, under the banner of an IAS Officers’ Forum, affronted the political executive by holding a press conference to suggest that the Delhi CM and his colleagues were playing politics on the backs of civil servants. Somewhere, Mr Baijal will be required to answer for this, and those involved with the press conference be made to confront their conduct rules and be held responsibl­e for derelictio­n of duty, if necessary.

If Mr Baijal, in effect, is taking shelter behind the constituti­onally unusual position of Delhi as a UT (whose overlordsh­ip does lie with the Centre in the constituti­onal scheme) to dance to the tune of the ruling party, it hardly behoves him to pit serving civil servants against the very government they are meant to serve. (At their press meet, the IAS officers offered nothing but a drain inspector’s report to belabour the point that they are “not on strike”, although they hold a five-minute protest against the elected executive during the lunch hour).

The non-Congress Opposition has raised its profile, and the Congress is missing the woods for the trees, as the Centre provokes a revolt of bureaucrat­s against the elected Delhi government.

While it’s extraordin­ary the L-G should refuse to meet his own CM to discuss governance issues in the nation’s capital, the L-G continued to wear the cloak of brief authority to deny the visiting CMs permission to meet the Delhi CM

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