Political
parties have their own distinct ideologies, on the basis of which they
draw up their programmes. With these they go to the electorate for garnering
support, and do so in varying degrees. When the electorate does not support
them to the extent that they think it ought to have, they feel let down
by the electorate's incapacity to appreciate their worth. They wait for
the time when the electorate will become aware of the virtues of their
particular programmes. All this is natural. A degree of impatience with
the electorate on the part of a political party when it does not get the
electorate's support is natural. Confidence on the part of a political
party in the worth of its own programme is natural. But the recent disquisitions
of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, which in effect blame the electorate
for giving a "fractured mandate", i.e. denying a clear majority
to the Congress Party, transgress these natural boundaries.
Manmohan Singh was, of all things, addressing the McKinsey board in India.
Why he should have been doing so in the first place is itself a mystery.
Prime Ministers of the country do not go around addressing boards of particular
multinational corporations. It is so improper for the head of a government
to hobnob with individual MNC heads or individual MNC boards that one
of the first acts of the Hu Jintao government in China, which was also
much appreciated by the people of that country, was to debar explicitly
all such meetings. In India no Prime Minister has done so in the past.
Meeting MNC heads in a group is one thing, but meeting any one MNC head
or addressing one particular MNC board is quite another. But Manmohan
Singh had no qualms about doing so.
What he said at this meeting is that "given the nature of competitive
politics and the very fractured mandates given to governments, it has
become difficult sometimes for us to do what is manifestly obvious"
(HT October 23). Manmohan Singh in short argued that the agenda he wished
to pursue was not just "manifestly obvious" to him or his Party.
It was "manifestly obvious" in general, i.e. "manifestly
obvious" to all. The hurdle that stands in the way of this agenda
being implemented is "competitive politics"; what exactly that
term means is not clear, but obviously the inference is that other people
than himself and his Party have such vested interests that they even prevent
the implementation of what is "manifestly obvious" for carrying
the country forward. And since the electorate, to whom also the correct
path should be "manifestly obvious", obstinately refuses to
brush aside these political parties playing "competitive politics",
and hands out a "fractured mandate" instead, it must also take
the blame for preventing the nation from going forward!
This, as mentioned earlier, is more than just an expression of impatience
at the lack of understanding on the part of other parties or the electorate,
at the whole messiness and tardiness with which "correct ideas"
gain ground in a parliamentary democracy. The "correct ideas"
are "manifestly obvious" to all. It is the perversity of the
people that prevents their being put into effect. Manmohan Singh's ideas
are "correct", and it is "manifestly obvious" that
they are. It is the perversity of the people who insist on handing out
a "fractured mandate" that prevents these ideas from being implemented.
One is reminded here of Bertolt Brecht's poem written after the Berlin
workers' uprising in the mid-fifties: "The government it appears
has lost the confidence of the people. Why doesn't it dismiss the people
and elect another?"
What we have here is not just an instance of magnified self-righteousness,
that Singh alone has the "manifestly" correct ideas and the
honesty of purpose for carrying them through, while all the rest are contemptible
practitioners of "competitive politics"! What his remarks indicate
is in fact a contempt for parliamentary democracy itself. They represent
a reification, of the sort that Jean Paul Sartre had satirized in the
context of the post-war Hungarian regime of Rakosi: "Budapest's subway
is in Rakosi's mind; if the subsoil does not allow it then the subsoil
must be counter-revolutionary!" The correct path for the people's
forward movement is in Manmohan Singh's mind; if the people do not vote
him to follow it, then the people must be perverse.
The essence of parliamentary democratic praxis, indeed of any praxis,
is a respect for the people. Even when one is absolutely convinced about
the correctness of one's own position, if the people reject this position,
then instead of blaming the people, one has to ask the question: why are
they rejecting this position? To do so may lead to some productive self-criticism.
But, not to do so, and to blame the people instead for handing out a "fractured
mandate" that prevents the implementation of "manifestly obvious"
ideas for the nation's progress, belongs conceptually to an authoritarian
agenda.
To assert this is not to make any personal aspersions about Manmohan Singh.
A conceptually authoritarian agenda in the realm of the polity is an integral
part of a neo-liberal economic agenda. The "manifestly obvious"
agenda for carrying forward the nation that Manmohan Singh was referring
to is the neo-liberal economic agenda. While this agenda has been introduced
in large measure, several components of it still remain to be acted upon,
such as "labour market flexibility", "financial sector
liberalization", privatization of profit-making public sector enterprises
in areas belonging to the "commanding heights" of the economy.
Likewise, while the neo-liberal agenda has been introduced, it has not
yet been insulated against political processes that give rise to changes
in government. The Indo-US Nuclear Deal which could have been one instrument
for ensuring such insulation, by making any Indian government susceptible
to energy blackmail by the US, and hence forcing it to toe the US line
not just on foreign policy, but on economic policy as well, is now facing
insurmountable opposition. No insulation of the neo-liberal policies against
government changes has therefore yet been put in place.
The panic that this would generate in international financial circles
in the event of a government change was briefly visible when the NDA had
lost the last election. The Wall Street Journal had even asked the question:
why should countries like India have such frequent elections? And the
same newspaper had published an article at the time which had argued that
the outcome of elections in countries like India should not depend solely
upon the people of those countries but should also take into account the
views of all "stakeholders" including foreign investors.
The need for an insulation of the neo-liberal economic agenda from democratic
political processes therefore is very real. But this insulation itself
is tantamount to a negation of parliamentary democracy. Since international
finance capital does not know what the next government would do, it must
ensure either that there is no next government at all, or that the next
government is so hamstrung that it would willy-nilly pursue the very same
policies that the present government has been doing. Either of these amounts
to a negation of parliamentary democracy, to a negation of choice before
the people, and hence to a de facto authoritarian system. This has still
not been achieved in India, which is the cause for Manmohan Singh's pique.
Singh's remark, that the pursuit of economic policies, whose soundness
is "manifestly obvious", is hindered by a "fractured mandate",
is in an encoded language. The decoded version would say: the institutionalization
of an unbridled neo-liberal regime is thwarted by the fact that we have
a multi-party parliamentary democracy where the people vote for a whole
range of parties, not all of whom can be rallied behind a neo-liberal
agenda. Thus the very strength of our political system, the fact that
it gives space to a whole range of regional and sectional aspirations,
and thereby retains the unity of a country that is marked by extraordinary
diversities, and the fact that it prevents, precisely because of these
very diversities, a hegemonization of its economy by internal finance
capital, is seen by Singh as its weakness. The strength of our parliamentary
democracy, instead of being a matter of pride, becomes for him a hurdle.
And that is symptomatic of the authoritarian conceptual universe of neo-liberalism
mentioned earlier.
Singh's disquisition continued when he inaugurated the 4th International
Conference on Federalism. Here he lamented the fact that "narrow
political considerations, based on regional or sectional loyalties and
ideologies can distort the national vision" (The Hindu Nov.6). And
this according to him happens when parties with varying national reach,
and many with a very limited sub-national reach, form a coalition at the
national level.
Let us leave aside the propriety of a Prime Minister debunking his own
allies, (without whose support he would not last a day as Prime Minister)
- debunking in public, and that too in front of an international audience.
Let us look at the intellectual merit of the argument.
In
practical terms what Singh is asking for is that only parties with a "national
reach" should form governments at the national level. But it is difficult
to decide which party has a "national reach" when no party gets
more than a quarter of the votes in any election. Singh may want that
only those parties which get more than a certain percentage of votes should
be allowed representation in parliament, but this, quite apart from being
a regurgitation of the old and obnoxious idea that there should be a two-party
system at the national level, consisting of the Congress and the BJP,
does not even solve Singh's problem, since the regional parties can come
together to form a front, like the present "third front" and
emerge as legitimate contenders for power at the national level.
The vacuity of this entire chain of reasoning arises because of two deep
flaws in it. First, it is based on an abstract metaphysical notion of
the "nation" separated from the people. Not surprisingly, it
is so palpably anti-people. The fact that in the national elections people
choose to cast more than 50 percent of the votes, i.e. a majority of the
votes, for parties that according to Singh's perception "distort
national vision", is not just an expression of utter contempt for
the people; it is a forcible disjunction between the "nation"
and the people that is almost reminiscent of the BJP's "India Shining"
campaign in the midst of peasant suicides. Second, while dissociating
the "nation" from the people, and apotheosizing it as standing
above the people, it implicitly associates it with the interests of international
finance capital. What after all is the "national vision" according
to Singh? The institutionalization of a neo-liberal regime, and associated
with it a strategic alliance with the US. The "nation's" interests
in short are those of international finance capital.
There is a sense of déjà vu about all this. Exactly a century
ago, Rudolf Hilferding in his opus Das Finanzkapital had identified as
the ideology of finance capital the glorification of the Idea of the Nation.
This was manifest during the period around the first world war and reached
its extreme limit under fascism. The fact that neo-liberalism promoted
by today's finance capital, which is anti-people, should talk in terms
of a "nation" that stands above the people but is actually identified
with finance capital, should therefore come as no surprise. The fact that
an intellectual and well-meaning Prime Minister should be articulating
such ideas only shows how strongly-rooted ideas are in their material
basis.
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