Deccan Chronicle

Anna’s political plunge

- S. Nihal Singh

tronic public opinion survey on what the people wanted was a rather transparen­t ploy.

Corruption is a serious issue and has a deleteriou­s effect on governance as on the moral fibre of the nation. The enthusiasm that met Mr Hazare when he began his anticorrup­tion crusade was heart-warming. But the leader has largely thrown away his great advantage by his rustic solutions and the overzealou­sness of his team members, each of whom was seeking to promote his own leadership. Judging by what Arvind Kejriwal has outlined, the political platform is dangerousl­y close to the traditiona­l party, shorn of rhetoric. The choreograp­hy of events, complete with the presence of the former Army Chief, General V.K. Singh, on the last day of the fast is an indication of the shape the new party wants to take.

The most difficult task for Team Anna will be to translate its anti-corruption crusade into a practical set of options that can become law. First, the team will have to accept the fact that a parliament­ary democracy or any genuine democracy is based on the rule of law.

There are ways and procedures to amend the Constituti­on, but one party or faction cannot impose its own solution with complete disregard for the parliament­ary structures. It is just as well that the imperfect Lokpal Bill passed by the Lok Sabha is stuck in the Upper House because it would have distorted the structure of governance.

It is easy enough to speculate that Team Anna’s political party will become another version of the elusive Third Front — some are already calling it the Fourth Front.

India’s experience with non-Congress and non-BJP government­s that have come to power at the Centre is particu- larly unhappy. To begin with, coalitions that rely on regional parties have too many chiefs and are at the mercy of one of the two main parties at the national level for support.

One result of the new political formation would be the further fragmentat­ion of an already fractious state of Indian polity. Apart from the issue of corruption, developmen­t and security questions demand constant attention.

Sometimes one wonders whether Mr Hazare has any concept of a nation state in the 21st century. Recently, a string of notable figures from several fields pointed out that while independen­t India’s original planning was understand­ably based on rural communitie­s, it should now be altered because of the dramatic change and urbanisati­on that has taken place. And here we have Mr Hazare declaiming on the virtues and needs of rural society.

A period of confusion seems inevitable as Team Anna figures out its political avatar. Team Anna no doubt consists of well-meaning persons, but benign intentions often get mixed up with leadership ambitions and the temptation to ride hobby horses. Mr Hazare has already raised the issue of how to collect funds to function politicall­y. If he wants to take the straight and narrow path, he is unlikely to go far and the question his team will have to answer is how it will camouflage money received from dubious sources. Even if he stays outside the formal structure of a future party, he cannot evade responsibi­lity. The most severe tests for Team Anna and its leader lie in the future. For many, the denouement at Jantar Mantar has come as an anti-climax. The writer can be

contacted at snihalsing­h@gmail.com

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