The Hindu (Kolkata)

A referendum on India’s future

- Shashi Tharoor Baawa Sayan Bajaj The writer acknowledg­es the contributi­on of Baawa Sayan Bajaj in the preparatio­n of this article

ven as campaignin­g gathers pace for the 2024 general election, distant seem the days when the world hailed our elections as a wondrous and clamorous aœair that rea„rmed our greatest achievemen­t: being the world’s largest democracy. But the past decade has diminished us in the eyes of the world, and to some extent our own, to an “electoral autocracy”. There is a palpable sense that in this election, we are €ghting to save our democracy itself.

It is impossible to escape the widespread perception that our elections increasing­ly sustain only the bare bones of democracy, even as its sinews — the legislatur­e, judiciary, media, “autonomous” watchdogs such as the Election Commission of India and the Reserve Bank of India, and agencies such as the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e and the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion — are either hollowed out or hijacked.

More pernicious still is the politics of hate, vigilantis­m in the name of religion, and the demonisati­on of minorities that the Bharatiya Janata Party government and its fellow travellers have promoted. Together with the intimidati­on of large sections of the media, the purchasing of Opposition Members of Parliament and Members of the Legislativ­e Assembly and the villainisa­tion of dissidence as “anti-national”, democracy is gasping for air in the suœocating embrace of its self-proclaimed “Mother”.

As we elect our 18th Lok Sabha, at stake here are not only 543 seats but also the India of our Constituti­on, the Hindustan which Iqbal eulogised as saare jahaan se achcha, and the Bharat for whose pluralism and inter-religious coexistenc­e Mahatma Gandhi laid down his life; 2024 is a referendum on India’s future: a choice between a hateful ethno-nationalis­m that disdains democratic accountabi­lity, and a civic nationalis­m — anchored in the Constituti­on and its institutio­ns — that safeguards our democracy and diversity.

EMuch has changed

Our €rst general election of 1951-52, the most audacious democratic experiment in history, was also a referendum on India’s future. The farther we drift from that moment in time, the more we take for granted its majesty. To remember it now, over 70 years later, is to realise how much has changed.

The spadework of nearly €ve years, carried out in cataclysmi­c conditions, preceded that general election. Onerous enough were the tasks of nation-building and reversing the depredatio­ns of colonial rule, but the makers of modern India had a lot more to reckon with: the †ames of Partition had to be doused and refugees rehabilita­ted, the ferocious invasion of Kashmir had to be quelled, and over 500 princely states with recalcitra­nt rulers had to be drawn into the Union. Yet, nothing could dampen the democratic zeal of Jawaharlal Nehru and his is a third-term Member of Parliament, Congress (Lok Sabha) for Thiruvanan­thapuram and the award-winning author of 25 books, including ‘The Battle of Belonging: on Nationalis­m, Patriotism, and What it Means to be Indian’ is a final year student of philosophy at Hansraj College, University of Delhi compatriot­s. While many other decolonise­d nations tumbled into authoritar­ianism, India drafted a trailblazi­ng Constituti­on, aœording a largely indigent and illiterate populace universal adult franchise: something even the United States, the world’s oldest modern democracy, had not yet done. With the passage of the Representa­tion of the People Act, 1950, we began evolving a system of voting for our enormous, geographic­ally diverse country with 176 million eligible voters, about 85% of them unlettered. An American observer noted that the challenge of preparing for the world’s largest election was of “colossal proportion­s”.

A quest to translate a vision into a reality

Far from building a cult of personalit­y around himself to consolidat­e his power, Nehru faced, even before the electoral contest of 1951–52, a formidable challenge to his values and leadership from within his own party. In August 1950, Purushotta­m Das Tandon had become president of the Congress. The elderly and socially conservati­ve Tandon represente­d everything Nehru detested: a belief in the primacy of Hindus over India’s minorities, a searing mistrust of Muslims, and a fervour for Hindi’s nationwide imposition.

In Nehru’s view, Tandon’s presidency blurred the lines between the Congress and communal organisati­ons such as the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh and Hindu Mahasabha. Worried that the party was abandoning its ideals, Nehru resigned from the Congress Working Committee, Parliament­ary Board and Central Election Committee, stopping just short of quitting the party itself. Terri€ed of losing their foremost vote-getter right before the election, the Congress rallied behind the Prime Minister. This compelled Tandon to resign in September 1951, at which point Nehru himself was elected president.

With the party in his thrall, Nehru strove to reshape it into a vehicle for delivering a “stable, secular and progressiv­e” India. Though it inherited the legacy of our freedom struggle, the Congress was never unopposed — not even at the genesis of our democracy. From J.B. Kripalani and Jayaprakas­h Narayan to Babasaheb Ambedkar and S.P. Mookerjee, redoubtabl­e leaders of all stripes berated Nehru and the Congress every day. Not one to criticise the Opposition for doing their job, and frequently commending them on the campaign trail, Nehru devoted himself to translatin­g the Constituti­on’s vision into reality.

Desiring greater representa­tion of women in Parliament, he wrote to the Chief Ministers in 1950 and suggested they encourage women legislator­s to resign from the State assemblies and contest for the €rst Lok Sabha. As adoring crowds swirled around him everywhere on the campaign trail, he persistent­ly reminded them to exercise their franchise: “It does not matter for whom you vote,” the star campaigner of the Congress would say, “but vote.”

While the intoxicati­ng popularity of two men — two Prime Ministers — characteri­ses both our €rst and latest general election, the ideas of India they embody are radically antithetic­al. Weeks ahead of the 2024 general election, the bank accounts of India’s largest Opposition party were frozen and an incumbent Chief Minister, a leading light of the Opposition, was cast behind bars. Long gone is Nehru’s age, where even the Communist Party of India, which had launched an armed rebellion against the Indian state in 1948, was welcomed into the political fray as a legitimate competitor. In the event, the Communists emerged second, garnering 16 out of 489 seats in the €rst Lok

Sabha and testifying to the freeness and fairness of our great experiment with democracy.

Indians went to the polls in 1951-52 amid a surcharged communal atmosphere. While the horrors of Partition continued to haunt their victims, the reprehensi­ble persecutio­n of Hindus in East Pakistan had led to vengeful violence against the Muslims of Calcutta, sparking more atrocities against Hindus in Dacca and its vicinity. This bolstered Nehru’s resolve to pursue, regardless of how Pakistan treated its minorities, his eœorts at forging a secular state, making him thunder in Parliament that “we shall not let India be slaughtere­d at the altar of bigotry”. Commencing his electoral tour at Ludhiana in 1951, he declared an “all-out war against communalis­m”, lambasting parties that in the garb of Hindu and Sikh culture were spewing hatred like the Muslim League had once done. Nehru waged a battle in defence of India’s soul, and called upon ordinary Indians to be his soldiers: their votes were to determine our future. Sure enough, harmony triumphed over hatred, with Jawaharlal Nehru leading the Congress to a resounding victory.

A battle again

Standing alone before a ballot box during the €rst general election, 107 million Indians (out of the 176 million eligible), their breaths held in awe, cast their votes and became the custodians of India’s fate. Today, 17 general elections later, we are again waging a battle for India’s soul. Let us honour the wisdom of our ancestors of the 1950s, who voted for an India that belonged to everyone, where Ram and Rahim were equivalent, and where their devotees together toiled to propel this country to dazzling new heights.

Such an India appals our ruling party. Petri€ed of the power of a united people, it has sought to divide us, hoping we never rise as one in defence of our republic. The choice is ours. We have already witnessed a partition of the Indian soil; the past decade has threatened to partition the Indian soul. This we must resolutely oppose, for in the words of our €rst Prime Minister: “Who lives if India dies?”

As Indians wait to elect their 18th Lok Sabha, at stake are not only 543 seats but also the ‘India’ and ‘Bharat’ of the Constituti­on

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India