Gulf Today

India’s new president is inspiratio­nal

-

In the Indian constituti­onal system, the president is a titular head of state, and real power lies with the prime minister, who is answerable to parliament. But the post has a huge symbolic value. When Droupadi Murmu, the 64-year-old Santhal – a major tribe in the east of the country, especially in the states of West Bengal, Odisha, Jharkhand – woman took oath of office on Monday morning in a solemn function in the Central Hall of Parliament as the 15th President of India, its symbolic significan­ce was not lost on the country. The tribals constitute about 8 per cent of the population, and they have been designated in the Constituti­on that was adopted in 1950 as Scheduled Tribes (STS), and they were provided with reservatio­ns as part of the affirmativ­e action policy of the successive government­s in the country since Independen­ce. But the choice of Murmu for president was seen as a politicall­y significan­t move on the part of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). This is the first time in the country’s 75 years of independen­ce that a tribal woman was chosen to hold the high constituti­onal office. President Murmu in her first speech ater the swearing-in ceremony made the poignant point: “Reaching the Presidenti­al post is not my personal achievemen­t, it is the achievemen­t of every poor in India. My election is evidence that the poor in India can not just dream but also fulfil those dreams.” Interestin­gly, Droupadi succeeds Ram Nath Kovind as president, who represents the most oppressed community among the Hindus, the

Scheduled Castes (SCS). Critics have observed that mainstream parties like the BJP indulge in a mere tokenism when they choose a person like Kovind or Murmu because the discrimina­tion and atrocities against the SCS in the society still continues though it is not as rampant as it was before. Similarly, making Murmu the president of the country when the STS remain poor and marginalis­ed in the country can seem to be an act of window-dressing.

Choosing an individual from either the SCS or the STS might seem a lip service to the marginalis­ed section, but it affirms as nothing else can that there is hope, and that dreams can be achieved. And it also asserts the simple idea of equality of status and equality of status enshrined in the Indian Constituti­on. And despite fierce rivalries, political parties across the board in power, those in power and those in opposition, respect the office of the president and repose confidence in the office-holder. The president is seen as above the political fray, and everyone looks to the president to be an impartial arbiter. It is this tradition of trust and respect invested in the president’s office that has made the Indian democratic system workable.

The Indian constituti­onal system has managed to create traditions around the apparently symbolic posts like that of President, so it leaves enough room for the system to function. The President in India has many discretion­ary powers, which are rarely used. For example, the President can send back a bill passed by Parliament for reconsider­ation, though it can be done only once. And the convention has emerged that the prime minister meets the president regularly to apprise the president about the working of the government. Constituti­onal experts are of the view that the text of the Constituti­on is not a sufficient guarantee for the smooth functionin­g of the government, and that there is need for convention­s or practices, which are not writen down in black and white, to keep the system going. India has developed the healthy convention of ceremonial deference to the President, the Head of the State. That is why, Murmu may been seen to be occupying a ceremonial office, but its symbolic value in the country’s political life remains high.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain