Millennium Post

Dishearten­ing dilemma

A reflection by a first-time voter on the absurdity of voting by choosing the lesser evil

- SANAH SINGH

At 18, the upcoming Delhi elections are going to be my first venture into electing a representa­tive as a first-time voter. Stuck at the crossroads of poor choices, I am baffled, confused and even horrified by the fake news, melodramat­ic insincerit­ies, unimaginat­ive ideas and even sheer indecencie­s of language at play, from all sides. Contradict­ory opinions and suggestion­s abound on the preferred option from my friends and family, whilst peppering their stances with sad prefixes and suffixes like “given the choices”, “there is no alternativ­e”, “at least better than others” and such-like helpless notes that really suggests the lack of a truly credible, transforma­tive and progressiv­e option that can be grabbed, without any ‘ifs’ and ‘buts’.

Aside from its obvious political and cultural importance as the capital of the country, Delhi refuses to abide by any singular identity, be it linguistic, cultural or religious. Strangely, such a multiplici­ty of identities within Delhi truly make it the ideal ‘capital’ of the idea of India that belongs to all in equal measure and not to some in more or less. Delhi is the totality of the emotions and aspiration­s of India that lives within it. It finds expression in the old refugee colonies of Rajendra Nagar and Chittaranj­an Park. It is in the Tibetan dominated areas of Majnu Ka Tila. It is Bhairon ka Mandir in the quaint backdrop of Purana Qila. It finds voice in the Hauz Khas melee where Mughal era tombs interspers­e with night clubs, tattoo parlours and modern art galleries. It is in the South Indian dominated area of RK Puram where I went to school and passed the Ayyappa and Balaji Mandirs on the way. It is in my own essentiall­y-jain dominated residentia­l colony, where my family, being onion and garlic eating non-vegetarian­s, are a happy minority.

Framing an inclusive, progressiv­e and sustainabl­e plan for a population that exists simultaneo­usly, as a collectivi­ty called Delhizens, as well as the multitude of little sub-groups that form this beautiful col

lectivity isn’t an easy task and shouldn’t be treated as such. Plans that attempt to uplift the most vulnerable and marginalis­ed sections of the population – the millions of slum dwellers, job-seekers, home

less that sleep on footpaths and under flyovers, as well as those at risk because of identity (caste, religion, or gender), needs reassuring ideas and solutions for generating resources and judiciousl­y deploying the same. What we are essentiall­y hearing is the ‘us-versus-them’ narrative (Pakistanis routinely make an appearance in our imaginatio­n), ‘freebies’ galore narrative, personalis­ed attacks and innuendoes of unimaginab­le

lows that shame us as a civilizati­on and its citizenry. The rot is not coming from what can be convenient­ly attributed to as the ‘fringe elements’, instead it comes from those at the very top of parties and echelons.

The ruling AAP is reiteratin­g its ‘work’ and alluding to the doomsday scenario if it were not to be elected. It has certainly emerged as a party with many

loyalists who claim change but is that not essentiall­y populism, made unsustaina­ble by failing to draft a road map of revenue-generation ideas to sustain the momentum? Free bus rides for all, free homes, free water, reduced pollution, etc., is indeed aspiration­al but it would take a lot more rigour in explicitly stating the ‘plans’ on how to do it all. BJP has retaliated with its own laundry list of competing freebies to make a ‘world-class city’ (2 lakh for the poor girl child, free bicycles and electric scooters for every poor college-going girl, etc.), even as it accuses AAP of reckless promises. The BJP manifesto ironically talks about high unemployme­nt (belated acceptance perhaps?) and its manifesto guarantees 10 lakh jobs for the unemployed and guaranteed work for contractua­l employees. The most important question on ‘how’ is as usual missing! Not to be left behind trailing the thunder of two principal parties at stake in Delhi, the Congress has made use of its roster of ideas ‘collected from people’ and the party has the usual promises around free electricit­y and monthly unemployme­nt allowances. Basically, it is the open season for raining unsustaina­ble promises and very shameful insults!

Across oceans in the US, in the Presidenti­al elections (which are still 10 months away) the constituen­ts are getting fed hard ‘plans’ with numbers, allocation­s, priorities and agendas to help make more informed choices. They are discussing individual positions on things like education financing, affirmativ­e action, green deal, carbon tax, gun control, healthcare, net neutrality, electoral reforms, campaign finance and societal issues. Each plan (or ‘promise’ as we readily call the same) is whetted by experts, questioned and counterarg­ued vigorously to answer the important question of ‘how’? People want to know the feasibilit­y, practicali­ty and above all, sustainabi­lity and morality of each action. Whereas we in the largest democracy in the world, from the land of Gandhi, Buddha and Ambedkar are luring our constituen­ts with ‘goli’, ‘biryani’, ‘freebies’, ‘antination­al’ and then the ultimate brahmastra i.e. ‘Pakistanis’!

It is frankly not the politician­s who have failed us, we too have failed ourselves with the sort of passion, piety and reverence that we attribute to our political leaders. Our polarised emotions don’t allow to us accept the political leaders as anything other than gods or devils, nature ordained grey simply does not exist. If this is the quality of plans and future that I am ‘promised’ in Delhi, I wonder about the fate of those in the less-visible places that are away from the prying eyes of the media and the world at

large. All my perception­s about the ‘responsibi­lity’ of power, my civics and social science classes and my school projects on democracy seem so distant from reality. Perhaps the elders were right after all, as it is not by selection but by a process of rejection that one is forced to make a choice. Choosing the

lesser evil might be the right answer here but that is indeed a very sad state of affairs.

The author is a first-year

law student. Views expressed are strictly personal

It is not only the politician­s who have failed us, we too have failed ourselves with the sort of passion, piety and reverence that we attribute to our political leaders. Our polarised emotions don’t allow to us accept the political leaders as anything other than gods or devils

 ??  ?? The prevalent election narrative is a mixup of ‘freebies galore’ and ‘ us versus them’ brand of tactics
The prevalent election narrative is a mixup of ‘freebies galore’ and ‘ us versus them’ brand of tactics
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