Hindustan Times (Noida)

The dangers of populism

Haryana’s decision to reserve jobs for locals is constituti­onally suspect, economical­ly unwise

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

On Tuesday, the Haryana governor gave his assent to a bill that provides 75% reservatio­n for locals in all private sector jobs that offer a salary of less than ₹50,000 a month. This was an election promise of Dushyant Chautala, the Bharatiya Janata Party’s key ally in the state. Under pressure from his largely Jat base, which is currently at the forefront of the farm protests, Mr Chautala is understood to have convinced his senior ally that this was the only way for him to stick to the alliance. The political calculatio­n aside, the law is based on the logic that reservatio­ns would boost local employment for the young and discourage migration — which the government claimed was leading to pressure on infrastruc­ture and “proliferat­ion of slums”. Reservatio­ns have been introduced for 10 years — but as India’s experience with reservatio­ns shows, once introduced, it is impossible to roll them back.

Haryana’s move is constituti­onally suspect. A range of fundamenta­l rights enables citizens to move freely, work anywhere in the country, and be entitled to be treated with equality and without discrimina­tion. The trend of promising reservatio­ns for locals — this extends beyond Harayana to a range of other states which have made similar promises — is also politicall­y and economical­ly unwise. Taking a narrow view of electoral politics, leaders are tempted by this populist trap of offering reservatio­ns to locals, but this undermines the often neglected constituti­onal ideal of fraternity, which can only come from citizens from different regions engaging with each other, including in workplaces. The move will also deepen the insider versus outsider form of parochial politics. Economical­ly, it sends a negative signal to investors, who place high premium on the ability to hire talent, at all positions, irrespecti­ve of their geographic­al origins.

The core problem in India’s political economy remains the lack of jobs. A secondary problem is the long-term distress in agricultur­e, which has reduced the social and economic status of once-dominant land-owning communitie­s such as the Jats (and the Patidars in Gujarat). This has resulted in two trends. The first is a demand for greater reservatio­n in state jobs. The second is a demand for locals in private sector jobs. Haryana is clearly responding to this.

But like the rest of India’s political class,

Haryana’s leaders are evading the real crisis of jobs to offer prescripti­ons which may only make the problem worse.

The US Capitol police department has obtained intelligen­ce pointing to a possible plot to “breach the Capitol by an unidentifi­ed militia group” on Thursday, the agency said in a statement on Wednesday.

The Capitol police added that it is working with local, state and federal agencies “to stop any threats to the Capitol,” adding, “We are taking the intelligen­ce seriously.” No further details on the threat were provided.

The threat appears to be connected to a far-right conspiracy theory, mainly promoted by supporters of Qanon, that Donald Trump will rise again to power on March 4, which was the original presidenti­al inaugurati­on day, until 1933, when it was moved to January 20.

A pro-trump mob that included a number of right-wing extremists stormed the Capitol on January 6 and interrupte­d the formal certificat­ion of President Joe Biden’s election victory over Trump in a rampage that killed five people, including a police officer.

The Capitol police statement noted that it already has made “significan­t security upgrades” at the Capitol, home to the US House of Representa­tives and Senate.

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