The Asian Age

Adieu to a calm, unfazed President

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President Pranab Mukherjee, whose five-year term ends today, will be remembered as the country’s most distinctiv­e head of state and also among its more distinguis­hed. In his time in Rashtrapat­i Bhavan, Mr Mukherjee transition­ed quite seamlessly from being an adept politician-administra­tor, who bore the burden of dozens of highlevel duties and connected responsibi­lities — probably more than any single Cabinet-level minister at the Centre in the annals of Indian administra­tive affairs — during two successive UPA government­s of which he was a highly regarded member, to being the calm and unfazed First Citizen to whose lot fell the task of maintainin­g balance as India hit an ideologica­l and political inflection point of extraordin­ary proportion­s.

Given Mr Mukherjee’s vast experience and acumen, many thought he might be ideal as Prime Minister. But the Congress took him out of the executive branch and made him President instead. There was little out of the ordinary in Mr Mukherjee’s first two years in the highest office. The country had a Congress-led government and the President was a man who had risen up the political ladder over four decades as a committed Congressma­n of the Nehru-Indira orientatio­n.

But cataclysmi­c political change overtook India in 2014, as Prime Minister Narendra Modi rode to power, determined with his compelling majority in Parliament to comprehens­ively eclipse all traces of the social and political compact developed under the Nehru-Indira politico — ideologica­l framework as RSS-driven Hindutva (political Hinduism) thought took centrestag­e.

Mr Mukherjee managed this unpreceden­ted turn in national life with a deep constituti­onal sense, even some elegance. He asked Mr Modi’s government questions when this became necessary, for example when the PM himself pushed for running important aspects of the administra­tion based on ordinances instead of parliament­ary clearance. The President held fast to his secular outlook against which those of the Hindutva orientatio­n chafe, but which is the bedrock on which our democratic structure stands. The finest example of this was his interventi­on through numerous statements on “tolerance” and India’s core civilisati­onal values in the 2015-16 period when dissidence was under constant attack by leading lights of the establishm­ent, and cow-vigilante killing of Muslim citizens in the face of government­al silence began to shame us.

On the other hand, the President may have disappoint­ed some of his fellow citizens when he refused to express himself, even obliquely, on a single question of policy. In this sense, he turned out to be a “textbook” President. Mr Mukherjee’s cause was helped by the fact that the PM showered him with institutio­nal courtesy at all times, to the point of calling the President his “guide” and “mentor”. The RSS too played it low key and left the Rashtrapat­i Bhavan alone to be an island of constituti­onal good grace.

Goodbye, Mr President, for standing by constituti­onal proprietie­s.

The President held fast to his secular outlook against which those of the Hindutva orientatio­n chafe, but which is the bedrock on which our democratic structure stands

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