India Today

SPLIT WIDE OPEN

Corruption, safety of women and law & order remain prime concerns for MOTN respondent­s. Opinion is divided on the state of Indian democracy, and differs along religious lines on ‘love jihad’ laws

- By Amarnath K. Menon

People feel the government isn’t doing enough to contain corruption

Is democracy safe or under siege in India? According to the India Today Mood of the Nation (MOTN) survey, the country is divided on the issue. While a large chunk believes our democracy is not under any threat, many others are apprehensi­ve. This is despite the positive image Prime Minister Narendra Modi enjoys as an exceptiona­l leader and a tough negotiator with a nativist governing philosophy catering to a populist and nationalis­t sentiment—all fitting the mould of an elected autocrat.

This has increasing­ly become a worldwide trend. According to the Global Populism Database—a tracker of populist discourse—some two billion people today are governed by somewhat moderately populist, populist or very populist leaders; an increase from 130 million at the turn of the millennium. The research puts Modi in the populist camp. Analysts feel that a lack of trust in democratic institutio­ns is giving rise to illiberal tendencies.

Corruption continues

What is perhaps most disconcert­ing is that an overwhelmi­ng 76 per cent feel that corruption has increased in the country, even though the Modi government has, so far, managed to avoid the mega corruption scandals that rocked the earlier UPA regime. According to the respondent­s, politician­s are among the most corrupt (39 per cent), followed by the police (20 per cent), government officials (14 per cent) and doctors (5 per cent). At 4 per cent each, journalist­s and lawyers don’t fare any better. However, for 88 per cent of the respondent­s, newspapers, magazines and television remain the most trusted mediums for news and informatio­n, way above social media.

After taking over as prime minister, Modi had famously declared “Na khaaunga, na khaane dunga (i will neither take bribes nor allow anyone else to)” and described himself as a “chowkidar” (watchman) of the nation’s wealth, but many feel he has been slow to deliver on his promises.

It took nearly half a century for the Lokpal law to be enacted from the time the need for the oversight institutio­n was first articulate­d. Now, more than six years after the Lokpal law received the president’s assent, the institutio­n is yet to play any significan­t role in tackling corruption. For over five years, no members or chairperso­n were appointed. The government claimed that since no one could be recognised as the Leader of the Opposition after the 2014 Lok Sabha election, the committee responsibl­e for selecting members of the Lokpal could not be constitute­d. This situation could have been easily remedied by either recognisin­g the leader of the single largest party in Opposition in the Lok Sabha as the leader of the Opposition or through an amendment, as was done for the selection committee to pick the director of the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion. The government glossed over this possible recourse. Moreover, the government has failed to reform public services prone to bribery, such as public schools, public hospitals, courts, transport, housing, land records, health and hospital services and the police. However, it did update anti-corruption laws and managed to get declaratio­ns worth Rs 76,000 crore under its three flagship black money projects: Income Declaratio­n Scheme, 2016, Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Yojana, 2016, and the Black Money (Undisclose­d Foreign Income and Assets) and Imposition of Tax Act, 2015.

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