Tipping Point
The prime minister’s second address from the
ramparts of Red Fort for the 69th Independence Day, long at 90
minutes, was notable for its focus on the poor, the farmer, the dalit, the
tribal.
It was something of a report card, with facts and
figures on the progress made towards helping these sections over the last
fifteen months. His anti-corruption stand, and measures to curb the stashing
abroad and bringing back of black money, also featured prominently for its
anti-fat-cat feel.
The speech, delivered once again without benefit of
bullet-proof vest or canopy, despite the
high security threat, was clearly designed to blunt the opposition onslaught. Modi
took pains, via his inclusions and exclusions, to refute by implication,
opposition and media charges that he is running a government only for the rich
and the corporates.
But, in the process, some of the trademark excitement
and flair of his oratory was clearly sacrificed. There was very little
inspirational coinage of acronyms and slogans, and no update on the ‘Make in
India’ from a year before. The only bit of vintage Modi was in the vision:
‘Start-up & Stand Up’, and its pithy slogan to match.
It is a pity that the recent bitterness of the
principal opposition’s attacks in particular, possibly out of existential desperation,
has had its effect on the prime
minister’s usual ebullience. He was noticeably measured and defensive. Even the
colour of his safaa was less flamboyant.
And yet, there was a sense of confidence and determination
that has come about with his 15 months on the job, and the self-knowledge that
he is succeeding; despite the blistering and often unfair criticism.
Tipping Point, a
best-selling book by sociologist Malcolm Gladwell (2000), defines its title
and main message as:‘The moment of critical mass’. And while Modi is still
building up to it, his critical mass; the evidence, like the tenaciously held
Iranian mission to refine its own nuclear fuel, is definitely building.
The same book, amongst its many insights, has this
to say: ‘Ideas and products and messages and behaviours spread like viruses
do.’ So wheeling it back a bit, just before Independence Day 2015, what do we
need to make of Rahul Gandhi declaring he was there to ‘stop the RSS and Modi’?
This, after assuming the mantle, along with his
mother, to drive the Monsoon session of parliament into being a complete washout
. Is the mother-son duo, and imposition of strident, far-left policies on the
Congress, feeling particularly threatened?
Not to be outdone, Modi has also asked teams of one
minister plus four BJP MPs to visit all 44 Lok Sabha constituencies of the
Congress MPs, and those of their firm allies, the Left, who also have 9 seats.
They are to explain the parliamentary goings-on to the voters there, and expose
the shenanigans of their elected representatives, including their willful
blocking of important legislation. And, how their MPs are not just being an
unhealthy opposition, using the
illegitimate politics of the trade union dharna inside
parliament, where debate and discussion is the process laid down; but are
out-and-out ‘anti-development’.
There are lines drawn in the sand now, for ‘battle’,
rather than discourse, as the President Pranab Mukherjee put it, in his
independence eve address. This is
probably irreversible, because it seeks, not parliamentary style compromise and
consensus, but the decisive win of one ideology and grouping over the other.
The sharply stepped up collision course picked on by
Congress at this stage is perplexing, because the rejection of its welfare
politics at the hustings took place only 15 months ago. Perhaps it is now
pinning its hopes on vigorously denigrating the BJP and working to see it fail
in its mission to bring vikas to the people.
The BJP, on its part, is equally unwilling to give
the Congress the importance it seeks. There is a considerable and ongoing slanging
match.
Congress repeatedly points out that it is only
paying BJP back in its own coin for all its obstruction of legislative business
during the UPA period. The BJP counters by pointing out the substantial number
of major scams under the UPA that had to be exposed. The Congress cites the
alleged wrong-doings in Rajasthan,
Madhya Pradesh and on the part of the foreign minister, and demands its pound
of flesh. The BJP rakes up wrong-doings of the Congress High Command over the
decades, misdeeds of a much higher order, to put things in perspective. The
acrimony on both sides is immense, polarising, and seemingly irreconcilable.
Congress says it represents the aam aadmi and
the poor, notwithstanding Arvind Kejriwal’s kidnap, hijack, and heist of this
particular platform! Rahul Gandhi has responded by copying some of the AAP’s
tactics, demagoguery, and media hunger; and vows that he will see to it that
the rights of ‘the people’ are not stolen by the ‘pro-business BJP’ .
BJP protests it is deeply pro-poor too, and now the
Independence Day speech underlines it. But the Modi government is very clear
that it is committed to ‘development’ as the means to the sustainable
upliftment of the poor.
So which side is going to win this now vicious battle
for the hearts and mind of the Indian voting public?
Fortunately for Modi and the NDA , there are four
years to go till 2019, in which to prove the case for its model of governance. This, essentially Gujarat model, is beginning
to bear fruit elsewhere.
With an unprecedented $ 5 billion in single location
investment and $20 billion pledged across different states by 2020, Taiwan HQ’d
Foxconn has made a dramatic beginning. It is building, first in Maharashtra, an
R&D centre, and mega manufacturing plant to make the innards of cellphones
etc. that will employ thousands.
There is no ambiguity. Chief minister Fadnavis has
allocated 1,500 acres of land near Pune for the project that even elicited
envious comment from China. The young and enthusiastic Fadnavis not only played
a highly proactive role in bagging this investment, but is proving the Modi
vision of competitive federalism in the states.
There will, no doubt, be many more such big ticket
foreign investments to come; and not just in the BJP ruled states. Karnataka,
the present IT capital of the country, in nominal competition with Andhra
Pradesh, and Haryana, under its Congress chief minister Siddaramiah, seems to
be resonating with Modi’s vision. He too is promoting business and industry,
and does not regard this activity as being ‘anti-poor’.
Whereas, the Gandhi scion seems to have a very
different vision. He is making every effort to declare himself and his party
opposed to the forces associated with big business. He thinks this will be
electorally sound. But, in the absence of power, and money flowing into the
High Command’s central coffers, is this going to be sustainable? And how long
before the Congress-run states, which need to generate revenue and support their
central leadership to boot, decide to protest?
The non-Congress, non-Left opposition, mostly
regional parties representing other state bastions and governments, are also
not comfortable with the disruption in parliament. And the central government,
taking a cue from this, is hoping to still pass the GST Bill by calling a
special session of parliament shortly.
Meanwhile, having just burnished his pro-poor
credentials, Modi has gone to the UAE to enthuse the lakhs in the Indian
diaspora there - and see if he can’t attract some of the $800 billion in
sovereign funds into India’s manufacturing industry and infrastructure
development.
For: Swarajyamag
(1,247 words)
15th August 2015
Gautam Mukherjee
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