Deccan Chronicle

Divisivene­ss and polls: Takeaways in US, India

- K.C. Singh

America’s midterm elections arouse global interest as the US President’s capacity to mould domestic policy and conduct diplomacy and war abroad can be constraine­d if the Opposition obtains control of even one House of Congress. Being in the United States, as I am currently, allows the viewing of intensive television coverage. The results arrive in phases as the polls in the western states lag due to America’s multiple time zones. The significan­ce this time was even greater as President Donald Trump, having rewritten the rules of domestic politics, was on test. The Economist wrote before the November 6 election that Mr Trump was “wilfully divisive” and, what is more, wallowed in it. As a result, politics as “compromise”, on which rests democratic functionin­g, gets vitiated and becomes impossible.

The same ailment afflicts Indian politics under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, as his BJP prepares for the electoral contest in crucial Hindi-belt states. Mr Trump’s campaignin­g exploited the fears of his core white constituen­cy by hyping-up a “caravan” of unarmed Hispanics moving from Central America to the US border, almost as if the US was under invasion. Troops were promptly deployed. Mr Trump also refused to accept that his divisive rhetoric may have caused attempted bombings of perceived anti-Trump media and Democratic leaders as indeed the carnage at a synagogue. The BJP analogousl­y first exacerbate­d gender and communal divisions by opposing the Supreme Court’s lifting of the ban on women of menstruati­on age praying at Kerala’s Sabarimala temple. After that, it confronted the Supreme Court over the Chief Justice postponing the hearing of the Ram Janmabhoom­i case to January. His predecesso­r had ordered day-today hearings. The Opposition had then felt the court was bowing to the political necessity of the ruling party. The BJP spokespers­ons are no longer sticking to their traditiona­l line that the BJP would abide by the Supreme Court ruling. The new, more provocativ­e, line is that the Ram Mandir would be built “there only”, implying that it would be irrespecti­ve of the court judgment.

The issue, therefore, is whether in the United States, the oldest and most powerful democracy globally, or in India, the most populous democracy, elections can be won by divisive rabblerous­ing, unlinked to governance and economic performanc­e. The US election shows suburban voter fatigue with divisive baiting of the “other” by President Trump. They would rather instead hear about economic issues affecting their daily lives. Mr Trump is, however, seeing the glass half full as Republican­s have in fact increased their control over the Senate, besides winning key gubernator­ial fights in crucial states like Florida and Texas. But the House of Representa­tives, now firmly in Democratic hands, controls fresh legislatio­n, besides having the power to launch impeachmen­t proceeding­s against public officials. The Economist has argued that President Trump requires serious congressio­nal oversight, which his own party has been remiss to undertake. This could include scrutiny of the Trump family’s conflicts of interest, Mr Trump’s taxation sleights of hand, his relations with Russia and the Saudi and Gulf ruling families, etc. In India too, the Narendra Modi government’s opaque decision-making is finally being questioned by the Central Informatio­n Commission and the Supreme Court. Regrettabl­y, the Indian parliament­ary committees lack the teeth and the will to be effective watchdogs.

Iran, China and the GCC members would be analysing how the electoral outcome impacts their strategic options. In the case of Iran, comprehens­ive US sanctions were unleashed on November 4. A weakened Mr Trump may embolden Europe to defy US pressure and continue to trade with Iran to retain both marketshar­e and influence in Tehran, which otherwise would pass on to China and Russia. It would also buy weakened Iranian President Hassan Rouhani some leeway. China has been at the receiving end of Mr Trump’s trade tariffs that are starting to slow down the Chinese economy and disrupt some supply chains involving hi-tech components. President Xi Jinping will meet Mr Trump later this month on the sidelines of the G-20 meeting. Mr Trump, behaving as if he has faced no setback, may cut China slack and accept a less than optimally advantageo­us deal. Mr Trump is, in fact, already framing even his setback as mere propaganda by his opponents.

Mr Trump’s electoral magic relies not just on trawling traditiona­l hostility of conservati­ve voters towards AfricanAme­ricans, Muslims, Jews and immigrants but his ability to tap into the more nebulous feeling of marginalis­ation and threat to American lifestyles. Similarly, in India, the BJP under Narendra Modi attempts to harness the majority community’s feeling that earlier government­s had “appeased” the minorities, illegal immigrants, etc, at their cost. Rightwing politician­s worldwide rally support by targeting the “other”. The same toxic anti-immigrant Islamophob­ia has undermined even leaders like German Chancellor Angela Merkel, after 13 years in power.

The checks and balances in the US system have finally kicked in to restrain a President who has debased the media, bludgeoned his own party into submission, loaded the Supreme Court with a conservati­ve majority and treated all political opponents as enemies to be vanquished, not engaged. India’s Westminste­r form of government unfortunat­ely has weaker balancing institutio­ns than those of the US. Separation of powers between the executive, legislatur­e and judiciary is not as ironclad as under the US presidenti­al system. A strong Prime Minister with a sweeping majority in the Lok Sabha can reduce Parliament to insignific­ance, as has happened in the past four years. The media has largely prostrated itself before the executive. Lord Acton’s dictum about absolute power corrupting absolutely should be a warning for the small coterie around the Prime Minister which controls most decision-making.

Like in the US, the recent Karnataka byelection­s indicated public unease with the current state of affairs. The coming Assembly polls in several states will clarify further whether “Sabka saath, sabka vikas” has been more slogan than reality. The Ram Mandir and the Sardar Patel statue are no substitute for Ramrajya, or perfect governance.

Narendra Modi campaigned in 2014 promising a Gujarat-model Ramrajya for 21st century India. He now offers Ram temple and a statue of Iron Man Sardar Patel. In the US, an unrepentan­t Donald Trump rants at a CNN correspond­ent and warns that he will retaliate if investigat­ed by the Democratic-controlled House. Not a great Diwali for India and the world!

The writer is a former secretary in the external affairs ministry. He tweets at @ambkcsingh

Mr Trump refused to accept that his divisive rhetoric may have caused attempted bombings of perceived anti-Trump media and Democratic leaders as indeed the carnage at a synagogue

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