The Asian Age

After reshuffle, govt must be energised

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The Cabinet reshuffle effected by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday has turned out to be an exercise whose real meaning is hard to fathom, although it did lead to the elevation of Nirmala Sitharaman as the nation's defence minister. No woman before has held the defence portfolio exclusivel­y, and this may be seen as the PM's appreciati­on of Ms Sitharaman's well-known capacity for sustained hard work without seeking the limelight. Some see in the move a blow for gender parity in the Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS), which earlier had only one woman member in a group of four (the ministers of home, defence, external affairs and finance), though it is doubtful this was an express objective of the reshuffle.

This is a government where power is concentrat­ed in the PMO. External affairs minister Sushma Swaraj, a capable political personalit­y, has been reduced to helping individual­s in distress through her tweets, with policy being handled in the PMO. Now, some apprehend, the new defence minister will become the real PR of her ministry with the PMO bureaucrat­s taking real charge. The economic scene is specially difficult. The agricultur­al economy is bad. Unemployme­nt is raging. Demonetisa­tion shook up the economy in negative ways.

The GST's implementa­tion is an added worry that has arisen at the same time as the adverse fallout of demonetisa­tion. The overall scenario needs an energised council of ministers along with an appropriat­e political direction and suitable policy framework. The chopping and changing of ministers does not reflect any steps in the first two areas, while we must await changes in the third, namely, in policy recalibrat­ion. Then why change the ministers who have been sent packing? Are those that remain of higher calibre?

For instance, what has been the contributi­on of agricultur­e minister Radha Mohan Singh in meeting the challenge of agricultur­e? A long list of examples will be obvious to many.

Uma Bharti and Suresh Prabhu were found not to have fulfilled their mandate and have been moved - Mr Prabhu to the important commerce ministry, where it is extremely important to push up exports in a not very hospitable internatio­nal environmen­t.

A number of former bureaucrat­s have been roped in as ministers of state, but not in areas where they have worked in their profession­al lives. One of them, K.J. Alphons, who has a good reputation in Kerala, has apparently been brought in for the explicit political purpose to enable the BJP-RSS to make inroads into Kerala’s Christian community, which has traditiona­lly been Congress-inclined. But the others, obviously good people, are on the same flat turf as the traditiona­l politicos. This reshuffle is meant to propel the government to safety as it approaches the next Lok Sabha election. The time for that is, however, fairly short.

External affairs minister Sushma Swaraj, a capable political personalit­y, has been reduced to helping individual­s in distress through her tweets, with policy being handled in the PMO.

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