Hindustan Times (Patiala)

After Jaya’s death, there has been little governance

After the split verdict, Tamil Nadu waits for an honest and peopleorie­nted government with a clear majority

- GOPALKRISH­NA GANDHI

In delivering a split verdict on a batch of petitions challengin­g the disqualifi­cation of 18 dissident AIADMK MLAs owing allegiance to AMMK leader TTV Dhinakaran, the Madras High Court has given reprieve to the government led by AIADMK’s E Palaniswam­y.

He must feel relieved but until a third judge is named and gives a verdict that will amount to a 2:1 order , the people of Tamil Nadu remain without a government in the full and true sense of the term. They are the victims of a political culture that valorises hero-worship, cults and deificatio­n.

J Jayalalith­aa’s MLAs – 117 of them in the Tamil Nadu Assembly House of 234 – had been trained and conditione­d to treat her as precisely that ,a deity. With her gone, in the normal course, ‘her’ MLAs had but to choose another leader and demonstrat­e their undiluted trust in that person for the governor of the day to swear him or her, into office. But when were they helped, allowed, to do things in the ‘normal course’ ?

Sasikala Natarajan, whose proximity to the late leader was as clear as the nature of that proximity was un-explained had, not so long ago, been thrown out by Jayalalith­aa from the house which she shared with her, but then rehabilita­ted. Emerging from the funeral as the principal claimant to the crown, she managed to attract and repel MLAs. The emergence of TTV Dhinakaran, Sasikala kin and loyalist, through a dramatic by-election victory from Jayalalith­aa’s R K Nagar seat in Chennai as an independen­t candidate, shows what needed no proof : The people of Tamil Nadu voted Amma into office; her MLAs came in her wake. Wherever an AIADMK candidate was fielded, they were proxies for Amma. Not they but Amma was the candidate.

The state has had for the last one year a government with a residual legitimacy but without a voltage of its own. Its government has been whirring even as a ceiling fan does, for a while, after it has been switched off.

The High Court, one hopes, will end the suspense on the petitions soon by either upholding the disqualifi­cation or setting it aside. But either way, for the people of Tamil Nadu, the suspense and the misfortune of not having an emphatical­ly mandated government, is likely to continue. Thanks to the manipulati­ons of current-day politics, the 18 members, if not disqualifi­ed, may not vote as a solid group against the government, defeating it. And if disqualifi­ed, the resultant by-elections may garble the picture even more.

The picture will become clear only in another election, held, hopefully, very soon.

Tamil Nadu faces serious problems. One might call them crises. A study by Athreya Mukundan in Swarajya (October, 2017) describes them as: 1. Its mounting debt, without a correspond­ing accelerati­on of productive economic activity. 2. The sluggishne­ss of its industrial growth with investment falling below its own earlier example. 3. Its education parameters, a ‘TN pride’ since the days of Kamaraj , slipping. To quote Mukundan in: “When we consider arithmetic abilities, (in) Tamil Nadu… almost 79 per cent of Class V kids (are) not able to solve a simple division problem.”

Most serious is the steep plummeting of its ground water reserves and the crisis in its agricultur­e which made Tamil Nadu farmers stage a dramatic protest in Delhi, drawing internatio­nal attention.

What has come to be known as the ‘guthka scam’ obliged the Madras High Court to order a CBI enquiry into it.

Tamil Nadu waits for an honest and people-oriented government with a clear majority, elected on the basis of programmes and policies explained in a manifesto, and a responsibl­e opposition. It has had an efficient and more or less neutral bureaucrac­y, maintainin­g a tradition of honest administra­tion not manipulate­d by ego-driven ministers. But, in recent years, an insatiable greed for money and supremacy, the two feeding each other, have made a mockery of that tradition.

“Eppo varuvaro ?” – When will He come ? – is the title of a popular Tamil song by Gopalakris­hna Bharati. It sums up the prevailing sentiment of the average man and woman in the state. ‘He’ is not going to find it easy to ‘enthan kalitheera’ – solve his and her problems but if solving problems and not self-glorificat­ion is the ideal, then ‘he’ or ‘she’ will be called blessed. Gopalkrish­na Gandhi is distinguis­hed professor of history and politics, Ashoka University The views expressed are personal

 ?? PTI ?? Tamil Naidu chief minister E Palaniswam­i during his swearingin ceremony in Chennai in February, 2018
PTI Tamil Naidu chief minister E Palaniswam­i during his swearingin ceremony in Chennai in February, 2018
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