alliance got a 2nd term on completion of
its 5 year term. But more then UPA’s
astouding victory the highlight of this
election was the depleted ‘Opposition’.
The principal opposition BJP lost even more
seats in the parliament, while the Left
parties fell to the 5th position with an
abysmal 20 seats. The new parliament is
turning out to be an open playground for
the UPA with the opposition seated clueless
with no idea as to how to counter the policies
of the current government. With the Congress
coming back to power in all the 3 states,
it now holds power in 15 states (in some
states with allies). The writing is on the
wall- NEED A POTENT, UNITED OPPOSITION TO
BALANCE THE DEMOCRATIC ACT.
Bad governance rewarded-
The state of Maharashtra epitomises this
issue in the best fashion. The Congress-
NCP combine is back in power for the 3rd
consecutive time. The government’s
performance of this combine has probably
been one of the worst that any state would
have witnessed in the last 10 years. Farmer
suicide is going up, power shortage is at
its peak, infrastructure development is
slowest in the whole country, water shortage
is increasing, and the security situation
is detoriating continuously. In the last
ten years in Mumbai alone 6 terror attacks
have taken place. Since 2005, every year
during monsoons, Mumbai gets flooded leaving
the city reeling under water. Raj Thakarey’s
MNS workers have openly attacked north Indians
and the government refusing to take any
swift action against him (for obvious political
reasons) is a major concern. With this kind
of a performance if a party/ alliance still
manages to win a 3rd term, then there has
to be something miserably wrong with the
opposition (BJP-Shiv Sena), that the people
of the state are dreading to give them a
second chance.
Urban voting percentage emaciating-
During the recent Assembly elections the
turn out in Mumbai was an abysmal 46%, while
Gurgaon registered 54% in the Haryana assembly
elections. The voting percentages of the
major metros of India in the Lok Sabha elections
in May do not look encouraging at all with
an exception of Chennai- Mumbai: 44%, Delhi
: 53%, Bangalore : 46%, Chennai : 60%, Hyderabad
: 54%...For the assembly elections the Election
Commission took an unprecedented move and
made sure that offices, colleges, malls,
theatres were all shut but yet the response
was still poor. The problem is that urban
India, the middle class, youth & professionals
do not feel inspired by the political fraternity
to come out & vote. With migration of
rural population into urban areas going
up, this trend could hamper the overall
voting percentage even more in the years
to come.
Rise of Naxalism- With
the naxal menace getting worse by the day
the Indian security situation has become
even more volatile. The reprehensible violent
methods adopted by naxals are a serious
cause of concern. But an even more serious
cause of concern is the growing support
for these naxals in the rural & tribal
areas. Poverty is the main reason behind
this growing support which again successive
governments have failed to counter. This
rise in support also underlines another
chilling reality - The Indian poor drifting
away from Indian democracy. The poor have
started loosing faith in the political system
to solve their basic issues. In turn they
are embracing the even more poisonous radicals
who in the long run could spell devastation
for the whole country including them.
After 62 years of independence India is
again fighting a battle for democracy. Probably
this time it’s not a mass revolution
like it was against the British rule, but
a more subtle & sustained battle been
fought in different corners through different
ways by different groups in this country.
It’s time for the establishment &
the civil society to wake up & smell
the coffee before the dragon within gets
out of control. |