Hindustan Times (Noida)

A TRANSFORME­D POLITICAL ARENA

A year into the pandemic, the story of political transforma­tion in India has to be viewed alongside what has not changed

- Prashant Jha letters@hindustant­imes.com

To discern any change in politics — and remember changes in politics are, more often than not, incrementa­l and take years to have a noticeable impact — the first clue is political vocabulary. The coinage of new terms reflects new ideas, and in turn, get reflected in political communicat­ion. Once the vocabulary gains legitimacy or appeal, there is an impact on political mobilisati­on — it is ideas that constitute the basis for any organised activity — as well as on policymaki­ng — these ideas, when in power, get translated into action.

This, then, generates debate and opposition, and ideas which till then enjoyed limited traction have become a part of everyday discourse.

A year after Covid-19 hit India, it is instructiv­e to examine — from the prism of politics — what has changed and what has not.

Vocabulary offers a clue. On March 1, 2020, when news of the first case hit the national Capital, no one thought that terms such as mahaamaari (pandemic), do gaj doori (six feet distance, to describe social distancing), lockdown, migrant workers, unlock, corona warriors (to hail frontline workers), RT-PCR (the gold standard for Covid-19 testing), testing labs, Covishield and Covaxin (the two vaccines currently deployed in India), and atmanirbha­rta (selfrelian­ce) would become a part of everyday discourse in India. No one thought that the idea of video conferenci­ng between the Prime Minister and state chief ministers, or between the PM and world leaders, would become such a regular occurrence that it wouldn’t be even seen as a departure from the older physical format of meetings.

No had thought that the impact of Covid-19 — reflected in this new discourse and new methods of interactio­n — would result in swasthya, or health, becoming a public policy priority of the highest order, with increases in budgets and allocation­s and renewed commitment to health-related institutio­ns. No one thought that demand for better health care, more facilities for health workers and speedier vaccinatio­n, would come from below in the crowded political marketplac­e of demands. And no one thought that the link between health and economy — reflected in the long march of migrants back home — would become so starkly clear.

Yet, all of this happened. And that reflects the story of political transforma­tion in India 2020-21.

But alongside, it is important to remember what has not changed.

Politics remains driven as much by real or perceived identity-related grievances. There remains a powerful Centre, led by a dominant Bharatiya Janata Party, which has, for most part, so far, been able to politicall­y overcome the disruption caused by the pandemic. There remains a weak national Opposition, which has neither been able to present an alternativ­e model of how it would have dealt with the pandemic and associated challenges nor leverage the discontent the pandemic produced among citizens. There remains an even greater economic challenge of generating jobs at a time when inequality has only become more stark and more starkly visible. There remains both cooperatio­n and discord in India’s federal structure, with difference­s between the Centre and states ruled by nonbjp forces. There remains the everyday staple of political rhetoric, as can be seen in states going for polls over the next eight weeks. And there remain questions about the health of India’s institutio­ns and whether democracy can navigate the dominance of one party while ensuring checks on it.

But along with this, the change is palpable.

There may be difference­s on the quantum of public spending on health, but there is little doubt that no government can now afford to go to the people without a report card on what it has done to handle the pandemic and improve health systems. There may be difference­s on the quantum and nature of welfare spending, but political parties cannot discard the idea of State support to the vulnerable — at a time when instrument­s of welfare came to the rescue of India’s poorest citizens.

There may be difference­s on the Centre’s new economic paradigm of embracing reforms and the private sector, but it clearly stems from a sense that the political economy cannot function in business-as-usual mode if India is to become “self-reliant” — and remember, the idea of self reliance itself is a product of the pandemic which disrupted global supply chains, brought home the reality of dependence on China, and the need to develop autonomous­ly.

And there may be difference­s on India’s foreign policy posture, but the pandemic has added to the urgency of making difficult geopolitic­al choices. The change is palpable in unlikely realms too, including the government’s relationsh­ip with big tech. Political communicat­ion — if you are on the side of the ruling dispensati­on or a part of the Opposition or a member of civil society organising protests — has become overwhelmi­ngly dependent on digital communicat­ion. And while the dispute between sovereign States and online platforms was a long time coming, it is perhaps not a coincidenc­e that this has intensifie­d in recent months as the value of digital platforms has become even more pronounced.

The pandemic has affected both social and economic structures. And if this is the case, politics and governance cannot be divorced from the underlying changes. It is still too soon — India is still confrontin­g the pandemic — to accurately gauge the nature and scale of changes. It is also tempting to underplay the continuiti­es and overplay the disruption. But what is clear is that the pandemic presented, arguably, one of the most difficult challenges the Indian State has confronted. When it emerges from it, scarred but also healed, the State — just like citizens — will not be the same. It will be better, in some ways, and it may be worse, in other ways.

 ?? ARVIND YADAV/ HT ARCHIVE ?? Newly elected members of Rajya Sabha maintain social distancing during the oath ceremony at Parliament House on
July 22, 2020.
ARVIND YADAV/ HT ARCHIVE Newly elected members of Rajya Sabha maintain social distancing during the oath ceremony at Parliament House on July 22, 2020.

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