The Hindu (Mumbai)

Promise or perish

Parties need to offer more than welfare schemes in their manifesto

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Political parties offer voters a preview of their vision in manifestos ahead of an election. Personalit­ydriven politics and rapid changes in communicat­ion modes have reduced the import of manifestos, but still they offer a structured documentat­ion of a political party’s approach to governance and state policy. The Congress manifesto for 2024, titled Nyay Patra (Document for Justice), is a pitch for the party’s political revival in the face of the expansive ideologica­l project of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). The Congress has offered 25 guarantees under categories such as justice for youth, women, farmers, workers and for equity. The focus, according to the party, is social justice, economy and the primacy of constituti­onal institutio­ns, and a promise to “reverse the damage,” allegedly done by the Narendra Modiled National Democratic Alliance government. The most significan­t political promise is to remove the 50% cap on reservatio­n for the Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and Other Backward Classes (OBC) and conduct a nationwide caste census. The Congress is wading into unfamiliar waters on this count, as it has for the longest time lived in denial of caste as a determinan­t of politics, even as the BJP has expanded its base by addressing it. A new law to ensure that “‘bail is the rule, jail is the exception’ in all criminal laws”, a review of all laws that interfere with the right to privacy and individual’s choice of food, dress or marriage, a selfregula­tion regime for the media and a law to preserve the freedom of the Internet have been promised.

An unconditio­nal cash transfer of ₹1 lakh a year to every poor family under the Mahalakshm­i scheme, legal right to the minimum support price (MSP), and the right to health with cashless insurance of up to ₹25 lakh under a universal health scheme are among the raft of welfare schemes that the Congress is offering to voters. Further, the party promises the right to apprentice­ship with an annual stipend of ₹1 lakh, the abolition of applicatio­n fees for government examinatio­n and government posts, onetime writing off of all educationa­l loans including unpaid interest and a lot more. Whether all this adds up to a new vision that stands out in comparison with that of the BJP, and has credibilit­y against the backdrop of the Congress’s own track record in governance are questions that remain. Welfare schemes have ceased to be differenti­ators between political parties as all of them offer a mix of these. The Congress should have shown more imaginatio­n than was evident in its manifesto.

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