The Hindu (Hyderabad)

The limitation­s of Ambedkarit­e Dalit politics today

- Harish S. Wankhede is Assistant Professor, Centre for Political Studies, School of Social Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi

Organising grand events and celebratio­ns in the month of April to commemorat­e Babasaheb Ambedkar’s birth anniversar­y has become a national ritual now. These only showcase the presence of a vibrant and robust Dalit mass, engaged to democratis­e the mainstream public culture. However, such a display of national Dalit unity around B.R. Ambedkar’s iconograph­y is unavailabl­e in the political sphere. Instead, there is a growing splinterin­g in Ambedkar’s political legacies today, making Dalit political parties a passive and relegated force.

Ambedkar envisaged a robust arrival of subaltern social groups, mainly the Dalit-Bahujan mass, as the prime claimant of state power and visualised that his political party, the Republican Party of India (RPI), would form a greater social alliance with the Adivasis, poor working classes and landless agrarian labourers and strengthen the movement against an exploitati­ve feudal and Brahmanica­l order. In the post-Ambedkar period, the major task of Dalit politics has been to follow Ambedkar’s legacy and establish the Dalit-Bahujan as the key transforma­tive force in democratic institutio­ns. However, even a cursory examinatio­n of contempora­ry Ambedkarit­e Dalit politics would showcase that it has disintegra­ted into segments, and lacks a visionary leadership, strong social base and e‹ective political strategies to re-emerge as a crucial player in democratic battles.

Ideologica­l camaraderi­e

In the post-Independen­ce democratic churning, a powerful arrival of agrarian backward castes in major States as the new ruling elites was witnessed. In the mid-1990s, the nation also experience­d a powerful Dalit political leadership, especially the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) under the leadership of Kanshi Ram and Mayawati in Uttar Pradesh.

The BSP emerged as a signicant political force and opened the possibilit­y that the politics of social justice would be a game changer in India’s democracy. In Maharashtr­a, during the same period, a new beginning was witnessed with the arrival of Republican-Bahujan leaders such as Prakash Ambedkar and Ramdas Athawale on the political turf. Similarly, the Viduthalai Chiruthaig­al Katchi (VCK) under Thol. Thirumaval­van in Tamil Nadu and the Lok Janshakti Party (LJP) led by Ram Vilas Paswan in Bihar provided space for a dignied and robust articulati­on of the Dalit political cause and re-introduced them as a crucial player in democratic battles. Though there was no alliance between these political outts, they had an ideologica­l camaraderi­e around the iconograph­y of Ambedkar, had a committed Dalit social base, and often ªagged the slogans of social justice.

Periodical­ly, even on their own political turf, these parties vacillated from core ideologica­l principles. The BSP joined hands with the Bharatiya Janata Party in 1995 to form the rst State government headed by Mayawati in Uttar Pradesh. It was followed by Ram Vilas Paswan joining the BJP led-alliance in 1999 and securing an important portfolio in Atal Bihari Vajpayee’s cabinet.

In Maharashtr­a, Ramdas Athawale distanced his political outt from the radical ideas of the Dalit movement and formed an electoral alliance with the BJP in 2011. Only a few among the Dalit parties, such as the VCK and Prakash Ambedkar’s political outts (recently renamed as Vanchit Bahujan Aghadi- VBA) retain a consistent anti-BJP position and formed only alliances with the secular parties.

The challenge of Hindutva hegemony

The aggressive ascendance of the BJP as a powerful mobiliser of Dalit-Bahujan groups under the Hindutva umbrella, has been met with little challenge by the Dalit parties. These parties lack strategic interventi­ons, innovative slogans and a capable leadership to motivate socially marginalis­ed communitie­s to stay away from Hindutva’s hegemonic cultural paradigm. Further, these parties have been limited to certain geographic­al boundaries as many States with a signicant Dalit population such as Punjab (32%), Bengal (24%), Himachal Pradesh (26%) and Haryana (21%), and parties such as the RPI or BSP failed to mobilise Dalits. Other marginalis­ed communitie­s such as Adivasis and Muslims also hesitate to vote for Dalit political outts overwhelmi­ngly as their ideologica­l commitment and capacity to win the electoral battles are often questioned.

In the run-up to the general election 2024, the Dalit parties could have presented a new outlook and innovative political programme to inªuence Dalit-Bahujan voters. For example, announcing a unied political bloc of Ambedkarit­e parties, especially of the BSP, VCK and VBA, could have helped set up a national Dalit-Bahujan agenda to challenge the current political establishm­ent. Though other political parties have often joined hands to secure their class and social interests, the Dalit parties have remained attached to regional specicitie­s and lacked the political imaginatio­n to revamp social justice politics. Most importantl­y, in the crucial political battle against the BJP, parties such as the VBA and BSP have decided to go it alone.

The refusal by these parties to form a unied secular front with mainstream Opposition parties may allow them to remain visible in the democratic processes. However, they seem unanswerab­le to the growing anxieties and troubles that the poor Dalit-Bahujan mass is facing under the Hindutva regime. There is a visible fear that the BJP’s return to power for a third term in India would also relegate the prospect of social justice politics and may disturb India’s constituti­onal democracy.

Segmented and powerless, Dalit-Bahujan politics today overtly shows that there are visible deviants into Ambedkar’s political legacies. The absence of a national political agenda, ruptures in political ideology and limitation­s in challengin­g the right-wing juggernaut have hampered the revival of Dalit politics today. A new generation of Dalit-Bahujan leaders and intellectu­als must emerge to cross these obstacles and rediscover a transforma­tive political alternativ­e — one that is truthful to Ambedkar’s political principles.

The absence of a national political agenda, ruptures in ideology and a weak response in taking on the right-wing juggernaut are aecting the revival of Dalit politics

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