The Asian Age

Flux in Centre-state ties with breakdown of trust

- Sanjaya Baru The writer is an economist, a best-selling author and former adviser to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. His latest book is India’s Power Elite: Class, Caste and a Cultural Revolution.

An outstandin­g address to the Goods and Services Tax (GST) Council by Tamil Nadu’s finance minister P.T. Rajan, a contentiou­s interactio­n between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee and the questionab­le remarks by V.K. Paul, a member of the Niti Aayog, blaming state government­s for the mess over the Covid vaccinatio­n strategy once again draw attention to the sorry state of Centre-state relations today. Mr Modi came to power in New Delhi in 2014 promising to adopt “cooperativ­e federalism” as his watchword. Seven years into office he is reminding many people across India of the Indira Gandhi era when the Centre rode roughshod over the states.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s recent direct interactio­n with district magistrate­s, ignoring their chief ministers, was also a reminder of Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi’s attempt to empower the district level bodies, funding them directly from New Delhi, bypassing state government­s.

The Indira-Rajiv era of unhappy Centre-state relations was challenged by several powerful chief ministers, including Jyoti Basu, N.T. Rama Rao and M. Karunanidh­i. The Centre is a conceptual myth, declared NTR, who in the early 1980s emerged as a stout defender of the rights of state legislatur­es and state government­s.

Seeking to retrieve the trust of provincial political leaders, Indira Gandhi appointed the Justice Sarkaria Commission on Centre-state relations in 1983. Every time that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had problems in dealing with state government­s he would, in jest, recall NTR’s assertion and remind himself of Justice Sarkaria’s views.

In the quarter century from 1989 to 2014, successive PMs had managed Centre-state relations within a framework of consensual politics. Prime Ministers P.V. Narasimha Rao, Atal Behari Vajpayee and Manmohan Singh maintained excellent personal, political and administra­tive relations with all the chief ministers, irrespecti­ve of their party political affiliatio­n.

Against this background, it is disconcert­ing to hear the Tamil Nadu finance minister speak of “a deteriorat­ion of the ‘relationsh­ip of trust’ between the government­s of the Union and the states”. It was even more worrisome to see a photograph of a scheduled meeting between the PM and the West Bengal CM in which the PM was seated at the head of the table and the CM and other officials, including the Leader of the Opposition BJP in the state Assembly, were required to be seated along both sides of the table. In the event, Ms Banerjee chose not to attend the meeting.

During his first term in office, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh travelled to many state capitals to chair meetings with state CMs and their ministeria­l colleagues and officials, often accompanie­d by the deputy chairman of the Planning Commission and senior Central government officials. The seating arrangemen­t always had the PM and his team seated across the table facing the CM and his/her colleagues. It was a gesture of respect that built trust. These meetings were meant to discuss the implementa­tion of various Centrally funded projects at the state level. The Centre has the money, but it is the states that implement all the projects and programmes. A cooperativ­e relationsh­ip between the two is essential for good governance in a quasi-federal administra­tive system like that of India.

The “deteriorat­ion in the relationsh­ip of trust” that the Tamil Nadu finance minister spoke of contrasts with the environmen­t of trust and mutual accommodat­ion that former finance minister Arun Jaitley referred to when he addressed a special midnight session of Parliament launching the new GST system. The late Arun Jaitley paid handsome tribute to three state finance ministers affiliated to political parties that opposed the BJP — Thomas Isaac of Kerala, Haseeb Drabu of Jammu and Kashmir and Amit Mitra of West Bengal — for their cooperatio­n and contributi­on to making the introducti­on of the GST possible. Jaitley’s consensual style, which he learnt at the feet of Prime Minister Vajpayee, served the nation well.

Narendra Modi’s imperious manner as Prime Minister contrasts with his attitude towards the Central government as the chief minister of Gujarat and his promise of pursuing “cooperativ­e federalism”. When Ms Banerjee objected over not being allowed to speak during the PM’s interactio­n with district magistrate­s, BJP spokespers­ons chided her for speaking out of turn. This incident reminded me of what used to happen at New Delhi’s Vigyan Bhavan during chief ministers’ conference­s during the first term of Dr Manmohan Singh. Mr Modi would step out of these meetings to address a group of select media people, summoned by the CM’s staff, in the lobby of Vigyan Bhavan. Ms Banerjee may well have learnt from that example of how a CM could upstage a PM at a national conference.

Whatever the banter and the normal party political difference­s, the fact is that such interactio­ns between the PM and CMs were usually cordial and businessli­ke during the tenures of consensual PMs like Narasimha Rao, Vajpayee and Dr Manmohan Singh. The current phase of discord and distrust must be brought to an end if India’s political leadership as a whole has to deal with the challenges of the Covid-19 pandemic and restore momentum to the economy.

Neither the management of the pandemic and the vaccinatio­n drive nor the challenge of fiscal stabilisat­ion and restoratio­n of growth momentum can be handled by the Central government alone. The citizen demands a rational and efficient vaccinatio­n programme, a humane and competent healthcare administra­tion and revival of economic growth, employment opportunit­ies and confidence in the mediumterm prospects of the economy. The bizarre games of political one-upmanship, the consequent weakening of federal institutio­ns and systems and the mutual blame game between politician­s at the Centre and in the states does not serve the interests of the citizen and the nation.

India has lived through many crises and it has recovered speedily when the Centre and the states have shared a spirit of cooperativ­e federalism. Any excessive politicisa­tion of federal governance does no good to either pandemic management or economic revival, nor indeed to an overall improvemen­t in the welfare of the citizen. A prolonged period of political grandstand­ing and continued tensions between the Centre and the states has already adversely impacted governance and economic developmen­t. In the event, the nation needs a renewed commitment to cooperativ­e federalism as defined by the principles of the Constituti­on.

Narendra Modi’s imperious manner as PM contrasts with his attitude towards the Central government as the chief minister of Gujarat and his promise of pursuing ‘cooperativ­e federalism’

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