Millennium Post

DEMONS OF DEMOCRACY!

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Avery crucial pillar of strength holding erect the India democracy is its Ministry of Home Affairs which is invested with the responsibi­lity of extending manpower, financial support, guidance and expertise to the state government, and maintainin­g security, peace and harmony in accordance with Constituti­onal rights of the state. Basically, ensuring federalism in India’s unitary democracy is the Home Ministry’s role and the responsibi­lity of the Union Home Minister is to perform this duty judiciousl­y. With the powers invested in the office of the Union Home Minister, there is as much scope of infiltrati­ng the length and breadth of the nation with Centre-dominating ideologies and notions which a federal India may not necessaril­y subscribe to. Plurality and diversity of ideologies, politics, and methods are the hallmarks of a healthy democracy and India is no exception. When Amit Shah questioned the efficacy of a multi-party democracy expressing doubts if it will be able to meet the goals of contempora­ry India, seven decades after the hard-earned Independen­ce, it must be borne in mind that the visions of the founding fathers of the Indian nation were the aptest goals to strive for especially in the context of the time seventy years ago, marked by a view to keep open the options and scope for a dynamic future. Linking Aadhaar to everything from bank account to social media was unthinkabl­e seven decades ago and the future of such a phenomenon is highly debatable, but the future of developing agricultur­e, industry, and services, etc, one by one was envisioned for greater sustained and enduring growth. Ensuring the dominance of ideologies and sensationa­lised intentions over developmen­t do little to establish anything of substance. The very purpose of a vision is to be forward-looking; looking back 70 years every time to criticise political undertakin­gs which may or may not be defunct now but which did pave the way for the India of today only betray a lack vision on part of the current dispensati­on. Also, honouring the legacy of the political forefather­s is one thing, but being guided by their ways, particular­ly in disagreeme­nt, is not suitable. There actually should not be any comparison between the past and the present leadership­s. An apt example is America where slavery was legal and the founders of America favoured it but it was abolished in the course of time and in keeping with the evolving needs for equality in the country. In comparison to that, the founding fathers of India were far more forward-looking, envisionin­g the future without the temporary provisions they put in place—reservatio­n and Article 370 being cases in point. Honouring the evolving needs of the electorate is a moral responsibi­lity of a government and making unreasonab­le comparison­s to distant points in time is nothing but creating distractio­ns in a lowly manner. Clearly, there are far more important matters in the present to focus on and to address urgently than to indulge in inconseque­ntial ideas of how less-than-perfect the past has been.

The Union Home Minister’s calling in question the Congress party’s “culture of policy paralysis” is justified to the extent that implementa­tion suffers and the common people bear the brunt of stalled governance. Shah ostensibly expressed that the previous government­s made only five decisions in the last 30 years whereas the Modi government made over 50 decisions in last five years. But, on the contrary, a holistic and collective deliberati­on is indispensa­ble to good and effective policymaki­ng, the impacts of which will be far-reaching into the future. Juxtaposed against that, the consequenc­es of hasty and unilateral decisions may seem like a spectacula­r display of power and bold decision-making but the immediate outcomes of this are just confusion, chaos, and resentment from a disconnect with the government. Making inoperativ­e Article 370 conferring special status to Jammu and Kashmir and the overnight decision of demonetisa­tion are just some examples. There are no magical fixtures in politics and governance which can hold people in awe. Consistent and continued efforts in the direction of a goal are what could possibly accomplish it. Stating aloud the doubt whether the multi-party democratic system in India had failed to fulfil the aspiration­s of the citizens of the country is a statement riled with criticism on many levels: aspiration­s of the citizens, if we may begin with allowing them a means to imagine any aspiration—jobs; citizens—after the taxing exercise of NRC and its outcome; a supposedly dysfunctio­nal multiparty democracy, the cornerston­e of the Union Minister’s grudge, it must be reiterated how repeated efforts to create a third front were rendered futile with defection. Alleging that the common man was clueless during the reign of Congress as to where the nation was headed and whether the leadership was actually able to steer the country out of the mess is reminiscen­t of post demonetisa­tion days of shifting goalposts and the pressing economic crisis of the present day when fortunes have been spent on erecting statues. Amit Shah may be right in assessing that the electorate were utterly disappoint­ed with the performanc­e of the previous government­s but he ought to acknowledg­e that too was the will of the people as was in 2014 and it is the will of the people and its expression that is paramount, not faulty deductions from it and fallacious opinions. The phenomenon of a multiparty democracy only enforces the essence of democracy. Shah’s emphasis on the need for 130 crore Indians to move in a coordinate­d fashion to realise the PM’S vision is to an appalling extent disregardi­ng the plurality and diversity that defines Indian democracy. A single-party democracy with an enforced uniform ideology is quite along the lines of North Korea which makes a devastatin­g mockery of both democracy and a republic. Diversity, multiplici­ty, and decentrali­sation are the strengths of Indian democracy and any assault on these by way of glorifying one-man leadership or a single language spoken by the majority, or any other similar method is a warning threat to our democracy.

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