Reform In A Post-Modernist World
Reform is a can of worms. It was tough for Margaret Thatcher,
but she stuck to her guns.
Reform in the national interest, something Modi has chosen as
his mission too, is always difficult. It displaces the hold of various vested
interests and elites. But great leaders historically have tended to cast
themselves in a heroic mould. They made a virtue out of not yielding or
retreating.
However, in a post-modernist world, all bets are off. U turns
and changing goal posts are no longer ignominious. New management gurus tell
us, the flexibility allows the leader to come at the problem from another side.
Obduracy is obsolete and restrictive. Modi, the reformer seems to buy this,
perhaps with a view to cause confusion and disarray.
But there appear to be some psychological issues too. This
tendency to be tough on external security matters and soft on governance has
roots somewhere. Is it an innate Gandhianism?
Or is it the trauma of being labelled a mass murderer by the
Opposition? This, after the communal riots that followed the horrible burning
alive of 69 Hindu pilgrims in a train compartment at Godhra in 2002.
Then Chief Minister
Modi and Home Minister Shah were legally cleared of all wrong-doing. But unlike
the Gandhis, that brazen out any and all references to 15,000 Sikhs murdered
after the assassination of Indira Gandhi, Modi still seems diffident.
In addition, there is the basic neediness. Ever since Modi
stormed the citadels of power in May 2014, he has chosen to be extremely gentle
with the Opposition.
The truncated and demolished Congress could not believe their
luck. Likewise, the TMC in their West Bengal bastion. They, and a few others,
quickly seized the initiative to create chaos in parliament. Getting away with
this, they took to the streets.
Modi did not act energetically to punish arson, violence,
rioting, lynching, illegal road blocking. This softly-softly stance has become
something of a leitmotif of his administration.
The NDA pushed through legislation in parliament, including
garnering support from other parties in the Rajya Sabha. This is commendable
because it still does not have a majority in the upper house.
But implementation has always been difficult. It is this
pattern that has stopped land acquisition, the CAA, the NRC, and now the Farmer
Acts.
Is the Modi government intimidated by opposition propaganda,
supported by leftist media both in India and abroad? It calls him arrogant and
dictatorial personally. It says the BJP and the RSS are blatantly divisive and
communal.
That this is a mirror image of the main opposition is the
irony. Pseudo-secularism apart, it has no difficulty in acting against
dissidents. Prime Minister Narendra Modi, on the other hand, is out on a quest
to be loved rather than feared.
Currently, there is much analysis on whether the Farm Laws
were withdrawn because the alienation of the Sikhs is at stake. There is also
talk of a sinister multidimensional plot aided by Pakistan’s ISI, other Islamic
terrorists, Christian support groups, Khalistanis and China, to foment riots in
multiple states. China has apparently stepped up its support to the Maoists in
central India and the insurgents in Manipur. NSA Ajit Doval recently hinted at
the existence of such internal fronts. The objective is to overthrow this
government in 2024.
There is a very real threat along the LaC. Pakistan is working
on its side of the LoC and along the international border as well. Still,
economic reform paralysis if
achieved is a victory for India’s enemies.
Britain is still welfarist and liberal under Boris Johnson, as
is Modi’s India. But Thatcher thought the almost dictatorial post WWII trade
unions needed to be tamed. Loss-making public enterprises needed to be privatised.
Coal mining needed to be shut down. Unaffordable subsidies had to be withdrawn.
It was a question of economic survival.
However, working class people did not like their cheese moved.
This even in a small island country with just one dominant religion and
ethnicity. And a population many times smaller than India’s today.
Thatcher also had a long festering terrorist insurgency
emanating from Ireland. The Irish Republican Army (IRA) nearly succeeded in
killing her. It blew up her bedroom but she was in the adjoining bathroom at
the time. The bombing was at the Grand Hotel in Brighton. Thatcher was
attending a Conservative Party conference there. This was some time before Indira Gandhi was
assassinated. Margaret Thatcher came to the funeral in solidarity.
Indira Gandhi was not an economic reformer in the Modi mould.
She nationalised the banks and abolished the privy purses, strengthening
India’s socialism. She also liberated
Bangladesh and confronted the Khalistanis. It was the last that resulted in her
assassination.
Thatcher was able to
retire with her stature intact. But her
tough conservative policies, her
confrontations with the EU, eventually resulted in her own party tilting her
out of the prime ministership. Thatcher was Britain’s longest standing prime
minister nevertheless.
In international affairs, along with Ronald Reagan, she was
instrumental in persuading Mikhail Gorbachev to dissolve the Soviet Union.
Reform, as in turning Turkey, the former keeper of Mecca, into
a secular country was not easy. But a militarist Kemal Ataturk shoved it
through. Emerging from the ruins of the Ottoman Empire, he saw the future of
Turkey as a part of Europe. This dream was only partially realised, with
romantic connections like the Orient Express. But even a secular Turkey was
never admitted into the EU.
Millions of Turks work in Germany, for example, but as guest
workers who need visas. Ataturk’s secular Turkey has now turned sharply towards
Wahhabi Islam. But he is still seen, even under Erdogan, who wants to be the
new Caliph for Sunni Islam, as the founder of modern Turkey.
None of the other leaders cited here backed down from their
agendas. Can Prime Minister Narendra Modi win using a different methodology?
Also because this latest capitulation is seen, given the timing, as an
electoral ploy. It has already triggered calls to roll back CAA, revoke Article
370, make a law to solidify MSP.
What next for the season of U turns? Modi is not the only
one. Arvind Kejriwal does it. Mamata
Banerjee does it. Rahul Gandhi does it. So does almost any politician put on
the spot. Post-modernism calls for ‘fluid discourses’. Welcome to the third
decade of the 21st century.
(1,061 words)
November 21st, 2021
For: Firstpost
Gautam Mukherjee
No comments:
Post a Comment