This
President Will Preside Over BJP Effort To Win A 3rd Term In 2024
It’s careful
business for the prime minister, who has the last word, to choose a
presidential candidate in 2022. More so, with a desperately reduced Opposition,
looking for a way back into the mainstream electoral game.
With BJP
holding 48% of the presidential votes before the contest begins, its newly
announced choice, the 1958 born Droupadi Murmu, former Governor in Jharkhand,
is more or less a shoo in.
Her
candidature is likely to receive unstinted support from the Biju Janata Dal
(BJD), for Murmu hails from Odisha. In fact, it has already been welcomed by
Naveen Patnaik, its Chief Minister. Others, such as the YSR Congress (YSRC),
have been sounded out, and are also likely to vote alongside the BJP.
The
Opposition candidate Yashwant Sinha, is an IAS member from Bihar turned
politician, in 1986. He was prominent nearly two decades ago, during the Chandrashekhar and Vajpayee administrations,
doing turns as Union Finance Minister, and also as External Affairs Minister.
Later, Sinha
fell out with the Modi administration, quitting the party in 2018, when it did
not consider the elderly politician for any role in the party or government.
Emerging now from membership in the Trinamool Congress (TMC), The 84-year-old
Sinha is doomed to probable failure. This, in the absence of sufficient numbers
to elect him, or indeed a truly united opposition.
Yashwant
Sinha has name recognition on his side, and a virulent antipathy to the Modi
administration to recommend him to the Opposition. If he were to win, on the
unlikely off-chance, he would most certainly be an activist president,
questioning many of the BJP/NDA government’s moves, even in the remaining time
up to the 2024 general elections. And certainly beyond if the BJP/NDA wins.
However, no
incumbent government can take kindly to an activist president, and nor is the
constitutional office really designed for such high jinks. The president, at
least in theory, is meant to be above party politics, and serving in the best
interests of the country. It is a vexatious matter however, when these
‘interests’ are interpreted differently by the incumbent government and the
president.
It has
happened occasionally, taking the country to the brink of a constitutional
crisis, for example in the tenure of President Zail Singh. He was in the
Rashtrapati Bhavan in the time of Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, over 35 years
ago.
The Modi
government will naturally do all in its power to negate such a possibility
emanating from the new president.
The new
president will be in office for five years till 2027. She will preside not only
over the next general election in 2024, when BJP expects to win a third
consecutive term, but witness many other changes. These include the functioning
out of a new, enhanced parliament building, built to accommodate more than 700
MPs. There will most likely be a slew of reformist legislation that could
embrace the Uniform Civil Code and a Population Control Bill. And an expected
major overhaul of the judiciary.
The Civil
Service, the broader Bureaucracy, the Armed Forces, and the digitisation of all
parts of the government and economy, is expected to continue apace. The
induction of 5G, 6 G, and the effects of sweeping Aatmanirbhar policies in
manufacturing and defence production, are all expected to be transformative.
The massive infrastructure modernisation drive will show significant results
beyond what we see today. Strong efforts to invite foreign investment into
manufacturing in India will open up new and exciting possibilities in
employment, business, industry, export and import.
The
rectification of a bias in education and curriculum is ongoing. The emphasis on
reviving Hinduism, its Mandirs and places of pilgrimage will continue.
Establishment of many more institutes of higher learning and research hospitals
are transforming society. A new diplomacy places India’s interests squarely in
the unafraid centre.
The
political agenda of a resurgent BJP will continue to make its presence felt in
all things. It will roll-back those aspects of the Nehruvian ethos which are
not useful to India’s present or future.
The economy
is being used as the most important of tools to take India into the top three
in the world. This president, who will be in office till 2027, will see the
Indian GDP at $5 trillion with all the attendant benefits this will bestow on
the people of India.
Other
contentious laws, either partisan, or flawed, such as the Right to Worship Act
1991, could be repealed.
The
Opposition, already out of power for nearly 10 years, is increasingly given to
using violence, rioting and protest to enforce a sort of street veto. This
cannot be allowed to go on indefinitely. Both legislation and administrative
measures will be used to curb such tactics in addition to firmer policing. The
new president will experience all this during her tenure and play her part in
the proceedings.
It is often
stated by some that many of this government’s reforms threaten the
constitution, but it must perhaps be realised by such objectors that the Indian
Constitution is a living document that can, and has been, amended several times
over the years. More often than not, it has been amended by the previous
Congress and UPA governments at that.
Even the
bulldozers that are being used to demolish illegal encroachments and
unauthorised construction in some states, are unsuccessfully opposed on this
basis in the courts.
Murmu, a
seasoned BJP politician from Odisha, has been an elected MLA twice, in 2000,
and again in 2009, winning from Rairangpur in Mayurbhanj district, both times
on a BJP ticket. She held charge of the Commerce and Transport Ministry in the
BJD-BJP coalition government, and later held the Fisheries and Animal Husbandry
portfolio. Most recently, she was Governor in Jharkhand, from 2015.
Murmu is a
well thought of tribal leader, who started her working life as a teacher.
Before becoming an MLA in Odisha, she was a councillor in the Rairangpur Nagar Panchayat, winning in 1997.
Later she was President of the BJP’s Scheduled Tribes Morcha.
Looking into
the crystal ball, it is conceivable that Droupadi Murmu’s elevation as
President of India will enthuse the Odisha voter in favour of the BJP.
In addition,
Droupadi Murmu’s presence in the Rashtrapati Bhavan, will, it is expected,
bring more of the female and tribal vote to the BJP in multiple states. This
could come in handy in short order, both in the various assembly elections
remaining in 2022 and 2023, and also in the general elections of 2024.
The ongoing
political developments in Maharashtra, like an earlier but similar interaction
in Karnataka, could again draw in the offices of the governor and the
president. The political effort will attempt to change the government in power
without going immediately for fresh elections.
Other
post-election adjustments have occurred in states like Goa. In all this, the
smooth handling of the constitutional offices overseen by outgoing President
Ramnath Kovind played a low-key but effective part. This is expected to
continue under President Murmu.
The office
of the president is both ceremonial and diplomatic. Having a female president
only for the second time in the history of independent India is a significant
international statement. Within the country, it signals the inclusiveness of
the present government in terms of the large tribal population around the
country who have been exploited and neglected in the past.
Murmu’s own
political track record suggests a deep commitment towards the poor and
downtrodden. Murmu has known deep
personal tragedy losing her husband and two sons in the process. The fact that
she was elected multiple times, in the Nagar Panchayat, and then again as MLA
from the same place in Rairangpur, is a testament to her popularity and
consistency.
India has
once again, in this choice for the highest constitutional office in the land,
cast its lot to demonstrate its commitment to diversity, gender equality, and
cultural symbolism.
(1,309
words)
June 22nd,
2022
For:
Firstpost
Gautam
Mukherjee
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