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Indian general election begins
Polls indicate race tightening
By Keith Jones
22 April 2004
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Indias general election, which is to be held in five
phases ending May 10, began Tuesday with voters in 140 parliamentary
constituencies spread over 13 states and 3 Union territories going
to the polls.
India is currently governed by the National Democratic Alliance
(NDA), a multi-party coalition dominated by the Hindu supremacist
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). At the BJPs prompting, the
NDA advanced the elections slated for next September in the hopes
of capitalizing on a spurt in economic growth, popular enthusiasm
for the opening of peace negotiations with Pakistan, and the disarray
in the ranks of the principal opposition party, the Congress.
A spate of opinion polls and an exit poll from yesterdays
first round of voting have forecast an NDA victory, but the NDA
lead in the polls has been shrinking. There is increasing press
speculation that the BJP-led alliance may fail to secure a parliamentary
majority, in part because of a projected voter-swing against two
key allies, the Telegu Desam Party (TDP) and the All-India Ana
Dravida Munnetra Kazagham (AIADMK). Respectively the governing
parties in the southern states of Andra Pradesh and Tamilnadu,
the TDP and the AIADMK, are strongly associated with the economic
liberalization agenda that Indian big business has been pursuing
since 1991.
Should the NDA fail to win a majority, it would not necessarily
fall from office, since the balance of power would be held by
an as of yet unknown number of MPs from non-aligned
caste-based and regional parties. These include likely NDA allies,
including parties that have refused to join the NDA in the hopes
of getting a better price for their support.
Like the BJP, the Congress has no chance of winning a majority
in the Lok Sabha, the lower house of Indias parliament,
on its own. Until this election the Congress, the traditional
ruling party of the Indian bourgeoisie, always rejected formal
electoral alliances at the all-India level. But such is the Congresss
decline it has had to place itself at the head of its own multi-party
coalition and in several key states, including Bihar and Tamilnadu,
agreed to play second fiddle to regional partners.
The Congress-led alliance has no real chance of winning enough
seats to form the government. Its ambitions to come to power are
dependent on it having support from the outside from
50-odd MPs from the Left Front, an electoral bloc led by the Stalinist
Communist Party of India (CPI) and Communist Party of India (Marxist).
For their part, the Stalinist parties have proclaimed that their
principal objective is to oust the BJP and bring to power, should
the election arithmetic permit, a secular governmenti.e.,
a Congress-led coalition.
The record of the NDA and the claims of the
BJP
Big business has made clear its preference for the BJP-led
NDA, which has held power continuously since 1998, although the
roster of the junior parties in the coalition has changed frequently.
The NDA has pressed forward with the dismantling of Indias
nationally-regulated economy, privatizing public sector units,
opening up banking, insurance and other sectors to foreign investment,
and beginning a second stage of economic reforms that
focus on eliminating obstacles to closing down factories, laying
off workers, and contracting out work.
The NDA government has pursued a strategic partnership
with the US, supporting the US invasion of Afghanistan and voicing
its willingness to join the Bush administrations missile
defence initiative. So as to press Indias claim for great-power
status, the NDA government has presided over a massive build-up
of Indias military and in 1998, within weeks of coming to
office, formally proclaimed India a nuclear-weapons state.
Officially the NDA does not subscribe to the BJPs Hindu
supremacist Hindutva doctrine. Yet the BJP-led government
has taken a number of significant steps to promote its notion
that India is a Hindu rashtra or state, most importantly
changing the education curriculum so as to propagate a Hindu supremacist
interpretation of Indian history and culture.
The Congress, which when it last formed the government (1991-96)
initiated the dismantling of Indias nationally regulated
economy, is no less supportive than the BJP-NDA of an alliance
between Indian and international capital to exploit Indians
vast reserves of cheap labor. As the Times of India observed
in an editorial this week, On the economic front,
the BJP and Congress cosy up as if they were identical twins.
Both are bullish on reforms, indeed, both claim credit for pushing
reforms. Naturally, experts delightedly point to the commonality
on crucial policy issues, from fiscal and financial sector policies
to those on trade, agriculture and industry. Whats more,
nowhere in its manifesto does the Congress threaten to reverse
anything the NDA has done.
If big business at present prefers the BJP-led NDA to the Congress,
it is because it wants the Left Front confined firmly to the opposition
benches and because it views the Congress as still living too
much in the shadow of its past role as architect of the India
bourgeoisies post-independence national development strategy,
which included modest social welfare provisions. After all, the
only real credentials of the Congress leader and prime ministerial
candidateSonia Gandhiis that she married into the
Nehru-Gandhi family, is the widow of former Prime Minister Rajiv
Gandhi, who was the son of Indira Gandhi and grandson of Indias
first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru.
The BJP-NDA is projecting itself as a force for stability led
by the experienced and internationally respected elder statesman
Atal Behari Vajpayee. In fact the BJP-led government stumbled
from crisis to crisis, bringing the subcontinent to the brink
of war and a possible nuclear conflagration in 2001-2002 and inciting
communal strife most tragically in Gujarat, where several thousand
people were killed in communal riots fomented by the BJP-state
government in February/March 2002.
As for Vajpayee, the octogenarian leader of the BJP, he is
a lifelong member of the fascistic, Hindu nationalist Rashtiya
Swayemsevak Sangh (RSS), who provides the moderate
counterpoint to L.K. Advani, the Home Minister who led the agitation
that resulted in the razing of the Babri Masjid mosque in Ayodhya
in 1992 and the worst communal bloodletting since the 1947 partition
of the subcontinent. Like Advani, Prime Minister Vajpayee continues
to call in the name of national reconciliation for
a Hindu temple to be built on Babri Masjids ashes.
Central to the BJP-NDA election propaganda is that its policies
have paved the way for India to rapidly emerge as an economic
dynamo and great power. Its India Shining campaign
reflects the buoyant mood of the Indian bourgeoisie, under conditions
where India has become a magnet for foreign investment and has
carved a niche for itself in the global economy as a site of office
and software outsourcing, and of the most privileged sections
of the middle class, who now have easy access to Western made
luxury and consumer products.
But for the vast majority of the population, the opening of
India to international capital and the related polices of privatization,
deregulation and cuts in social spending have meant increasing
economic insecurity and poverty. Even Vajpayee had to momentarily
admit that there is another side of India, which is not
shining, which has areas of darkness after more than 20
impoverished women were trampled to death while trying to obtain
free saris (the traditional womens garment) at a BJP-linked
function in Lucknow.
Beating the Hindutva drum
In the run-up to last Februarys dissolution of parliament,
Vajpayee and other BJP leaders claimed that their partys
election campaign would focus on the issues of economic development,
good governance, and the pursuit of peace with Pakistan and that
Hindutva would be downplayed. This was meant to reassure
Indian big business and international capital, which view the
BJPs communal agenda and brinkmanship against Pakistan as
destabilizing and a diversion from pressing forward with economic
reforms. Indeed, so confident is Indian big business of its new
economic prowess that it believes it will be better able to suborn
Pakistan through the establishment of a South Asian free trade
than by the BJPs sabre-rattling.
However, as the campaign has progressed the BJP has evermore
frequently made rank Indian chauvinist and Hindu supremacist appeals.
At the BJPs insistence, the NDA manifesto calls for legislation
banning non-Indiansread the Italian born, Roman Catholic
Sonia Gandhifrom high office and calls a solution
to the Ayodhya dispute a national priority. Among the BJPs
leading campaigners has been the Gujarat Chief Minster Narendra
Modi, who is notorious for his role in fomenting and defending
the communal outrages against Muslims in 2002.
The BJPs decision to beat its Hindu supremacist drum
may be a response to mounting fears that its campaign is not going
as well as hoped. What is certain is that the NDA governments
peace overtures to Pakistan and pursuit of a liberalization
agenda that serves the most powerful sections of Indian capital,
but often has a ruinous impact on the petty bourgeoisie, has caused
dissension among its followers. The Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP),
the organization that led the Ayodhya agitation, has issued a
number of statements highly critical of the BJP. In an attempt
to rally the RSS and its affiliates behind the BJP election campaign,
top RSS leaders met with Vajpayee and other senior BJP leaders
at the prime ministers residence in early March.
The Congress campaign meanwhile has sputtered. In Uttar Pradesh,
the countrys largest state, the Congress expected to be
able to form an electoral alliance with the governing party, the
Samajwadi Party (SP), or the Bahujan Samaj (BSP), a party that
claims to speak for Indias former untouchables. In the end,
both the SP and BSP spurned its overtures. So bankrupt is the
Congress, that to excite its cadres it conscripted Sonia Gandhis
son to run from a UP seat. His sister has also been given a prominent
role in the Congress campaign.
The Congress has attacked the BJP from both left and right,
a considerable feat given the BJPs reactionary rhetoric
and program. The Congress has made calibrated appeals to the popular
opposition to the economic reforms by naming unemployment the
number one election issue and denigrating the NDAs claims
that India is shining. Yet it has also proclaimed the Congress
the true party of liberalization. Similarly, the Congress has
criticized Vajpayee for having voted against continuing Indias
nuclear weapons development program when he was a minister in
the Janata Party government in the late 1970s.
The CPI and CPI (M) justify their alliance with Congress on
the grounds that it is a lesser evil to the BJP. There is no question
that the BJP is an extremely reactionary political formation,
utterly hostile to the interests of Indias toiling masses.
But it is the Stalinists decades-long systematic subordination
of the working class to the parties of the Indian bourgeoisie,
including at times alliances with the BJP and its forerunner the
Jan Sangh, that paved the way for the BJPs rise to political
power.
In the past, the Stalinists justified their alliances with
one or another bourgeois party on the grounds that it was pursuing
an anti-imperialist or anti-feudal national development strategy.
Now that Indian capital has forsaken its pretensions to national
development and is allying openly with international capital in
pursuit of an even-more unabashedly anti-working class agenda,
the Stalinists continue the same essential policy but in the name
of upholding the secularism of a state founded through the communal
partition of the subcontinent.
The Indian elections underscore the urgency of Indian workers
adopting a new perspective, based on the independent political
mobilization of the working class and socialist internationalism.
See Also:
Indias election commission demands
BJP explain its role in Lucknow tragedy
[19 April 2004]
Indias Hindu chauvinist-led
coalition government calls early election
[4 March 2004]
Millions of Indian government
employees to go on strike today
[24 February 2004]
India and Pakistan to pursue
composite dialogue
[29 January 2004]
Behind the India-Pakistan
ceasefire
[29 December 2003]
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