May 28, 2014
Shankar Roychowdhury
Change is always easier promised in political speeches than is actually delivered, particularly economic transformation which has its own inherent inertia
“It’s the economy, stupid.”
— James Carville, campaign strategist for Bill Clinton, US Presidential election 1992
India’s general elections 2014 are over, and the vigorous, experienced and sophisticated electoral process has generated a total change in management this time around, placing an entirely new government in office.
In American parlance, “there’s a new sheriff in town”, led by a conservative Right-wing political party, generally disparaged as “Hindu nationalist” by commentators in the West, and their Indian acolytes at home. The party and its leader, the new Prime Minister of India, have been accused of engineering communal riots, pogroms and practicing religious discrimination against minorities, charges which, as expected, have all been vigorously denied. This, of course, is par for play in all political discourse, but in all fairness it must also be noted that a Special Investigation Team, established under orders of the Supreme Court of India to investigate large-scale communal riots in Gujarat in 2002, do not appear to have found any credible evidence of personal culpability or involvement of the present Prime Minister who was the state chief minister at the time.
The recent general elections were contested amidst an atmosphere of unprecedented viciousness, in which high-decibel, no-holds-barred mud-slinging was freely indulged in, which did succeed in polarising and influencing public and societal perceptions to an appreciable extent. At the end of it all, the so-called Right-wing “Hindu nationalists” swept to power in no uncertain terms, under a forceful but controversial chief executive with an earlier record of brisk, no-nonsense governance as chief minister in his parent state. India’s vox populi had pronounced its verdict.
Now that the heat and dust have settled somewhat, it is vitally important to remember that time is at a premium, that people are impatient, and India is a country in a hurry for the promised “good days ahead”. The new administration will have to hit the ground sprinting. The next general elections are due in 2019, distant yet not all that far away if one considers that when the new Prime Minister is scheduled to present his report card as promised. A lot of work needs to be done in the meanwhile.
Change is always easier promised in political speeches than is actually delivered, particularly economic transformation which has its own inherent inertia. To be effective in the context of argumentative India, where perpetually squabbling political parties are obstructive often to the point of sheer cussedness, there is no reason to expect sanity to prevail now that the roles are reversed.
Shankar Roychowdhury
Change is always easier promised in political speeches than is actually delivered, particularly economic transformation which has its own inherent inertia
“It’s the economy, stupid.”
— James Carville, campaign strategist for Bill Clinton, US Presidential election 1992
India’s general elections 2014 are over, and the vigorous, experienced and sophisticated electoral process has generated a total change in management this time around, placing an entirely new government in office.
In American parlance, “there’s a new sheriff in town”, led by a conservative Right-wing political party, generally disparaged as “Hindu nationalist” by commentators in the West, and their Indian acolytes at home. The party and its leader, the new Prime Minister of India, have been accused of engineering communal riots, pogroms and practicing religious discrimination against minorities, charges which, as expected, have all been vigorously denied. This, of course, is par for play in all political discourse, but in all fairness it must also be noted that a Special Investigation Team, established under orders of the Supreme Court of India to investigate large-scale communal riots in Gujarat in 2002, do not appear to have found any credible evidence of personal culpability or involvement of the present Prime Minister who was the state chief minister at the time.
The recent general elections were contested amidst an atmosphere of unprecedented viciousness, in which high-decibel, no-holds-barred mud-slinging was freely indulged in, which did succeed in polarising and influencing public and societal perceptions to an appreciable extent. At the end of it all, the so-called Right-wing “Hindu nationalists” swept to power in no uncertain terms, under a forceful but controversial chief executive with an earlier record of brisk, no-nonsense governance as chief minister in his parent state. India’s vox populi had pronounced its verdict.
Now that the heat and dust have settled somewhat, it is vitally important to remember that time is at a premium, that people are impatient, and India is a country in a hurry for the promised “good days ahead”. The new administration will have to hit the ground sprinting. The next general elections are due in 2019, distant yet not all that far away if one considers that when the new Prime Minister is scheduled to present his report card as promised. A lot of work needs to be done in the meanwhile.
Change is always easier promised in political speeches than is actually delivered, particularly economic transformation which has its own inherent inertia. To be effective in the context of argumentative India, where perpetually squabbling political parties are obstructive often to the point of sheer cussedness, there is no reason to expect sanity to prevail now that the roles are reversed.