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Political earthquake in India
Hindu supremacist BJP falls from power
By Keith Jones
15 May 2004
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To the shock of Indias entire political and economic
establishment, the Hindu supremacist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)
and its National Democratic Alliance (NDA) coalition have been
swept from office. Just hours after vote counting began Thursday
morning, the BJP-led NDA conceded defeat in Indias 14th
general election and by evening Atal Behari Vajpayee, the Prime
Minister since 1998, had tendered his resignation.
The BJP had triggered early elections calculating that it could
exploit a spurt in economic growth, popular enthusiasm for its
peace overtures to Pakistan, and the disarray of its principal
rival, the Congress party, to win an increased majority. In this
it was strongly encouraged by big business and the corporate media.
The sparse crowds at BJP rallies and a spate of exit polls
during the multi-phase voting indicated that there was a strong
current of popular opposition to the government. But till Thursday
the media continued to insist that the NDA would win a plurality
of seats and the BJP many more than the Congress.
In fact, the NDA, which in the outgoing Lok Sabha held more
than 300 seats, saw its total slashed to 186, thirty less than
the Congress-led multi-party alliance. As for the BJP, its individual
seat tally was cut by 49 seats from the 1999 election, falling
from 182 to 133. For the first time since the 1991-96 parliament,
the Congress Lok Sabha delegation will be larger than the
BJPs.
The election results constitute a devastating popular refutation
of the BJP-NDAs claims that the program of economic liberalization
initiated by the Congress government of Narasimha Rao in 1991,
and intensified and widened during the six-years of NDA rule,
has India Shining. The electorate also repudiated
the BJPs virulent Hindu supremacist agenda. In Gujarat,
where the BJP state government fomented an anti-Muslim pogrom
in February-March 2002, then exploited the carnage to win re-election
by a landslide, the BJPs Lok Sabha representation was sharply
reduced, leaving it with just 14 of Gujarats 26 seats.
Indias traditional governing party, the Congress, will
form a new coalition government. Although the Congress and its
pre-poll allies are some 55 seats short of a majority, the Congress
is guaranteed the support of the 62 MPs of the Left Front, the
electoral bloc led by the Communist Party of India (Marxist).
The Stalinists concede that the Congress socio-economic
programme is all but identical to that of the BJP. Yet they claim
a Congress-led government must be supported because it is the
only means of preventing the BJP-NDA from wrecking Indias
secular democracy.
The Stalinists are playing a pivotal role in Congress
efforts to woo other coalition partners from among a myriad of
regional and caste-based parties that collectively hold about
75 Lok Sabha seats. Whoever can be roped in should be invited
to join the secular front, declared Harkishan Singh Surjeet,
the CPI (M)s general secretary and its point man in the
negotiations with the Congress, its allies and potential allies.
The Stalinists are the keenest advocates of the Congress-led coalition
adopting a so-called Common Minimum Program, so that it can better
project itself as a stable alliance that can govern India for
the duration of the new Lok Sabhas five-year mandate.
The Congress made calibrated appeals to popular discontent
over the hardships caused by the closure and sell-off of public
sector units, cuts to social welfare programs, higher water and
electricity rates, and more generally the growth of economic insecurity,
poverty and social inequality. Among its various populist promises
was a claim that a Congress government would ensure that every
rural family has at least one member employed on public works
projects for 100 days per year.
At the same time, the Congress pledged its full support for
big business export-led growth strategy, which aims to make
India a low-wage haven for transnational corporations through
privatization, deregulation, tariff cuts, and reducing public
services and corporate taxes.
Sonia Gandhi, the Congress leader and presumptive prime
ministerial candidate, moved quickly Friday to reassure Indian
and foreign capital of her commitment to press forward with the
dismantling of what remains of Indias nationally-regulated
economy and the minimal social welfare programs with which it
was associated. The economic reforms, Gandhi told
reporters, were initiated by the Congress, by my husband,
and later by Congress governments. They will be carried forward.
To further underline her support for business liberalization
agenda, Gandhi named Manmohan Singh, the Finance Minister who
was the initial architect of the reforms, as head of the Congress
panel that will negotiate with its allies and potential allies
the provisions of the Common Minimum Program. Investors,
declared Singh Friday evening, can rest assured that the
new Government will pursue policies to create favourable climate
for growth.
Big business has every confidence that the Congress, its traditional
party, will cede to its wishes and recognizes that the Left Fronts
denunciations of the reforms are largely rhetorical. Responding
to the election results, Confederation of Indian Industry President
Y.K. Modi said he didnt think the Left would constitute
a problem since West Bengals Left Front government
has pursued economic policies in line with those of the Congress
and BJP. His remarks were seconded by S.K. Birla, chairman of
the Birla group, who labelled the West Bengal regime pro-reform.
But the more sober and farsighted representatives of the Indias
ruling class cannot but be shaken by the gulf the elections revealed
between the elites policy consensus, perceptions and aspirations,
and those of Indias toiling masses. In effect, the political
establishment was blindsided by a massive popular backlash against
its reform program.
That the BJP could claim India was shining under
conditions where unemployment and underemployment are estimated
at around 20 percent, where hundreds of millions have no access
to clean water, where a third of the population lives in absolute
poverty, where debt and famine have led thousands of small
farmers in recent years to take their own lives, only served to
highlight its indifference to the plight of the majority.
The Other India tries to strike
back
The BJP and its NDA allies lost support in virtually every
part of the country, with voters generally turning to the party
most critical of the reforms among those considered as having
a genuine shot at capturing their constituency.
Thus in Indias largest state, Uttar Pradesh, the principal
beneficiary of the anti-reform backlash was the Samajwadi or Socialist
Party and in Bihar, The Rashtriya Janata Dal.
The Left Front, whose electoral support comes principally from
West Bengal, Kerala and Tripura, captured its largest ever number
of Lok Sabha seats, 62, an increase of some 20 seats from 1999.
In West Bengal, the Left Front, not the Congress, was the beneficiary
of the swing against the BJP and the BJPs West Bengal ally,
the Trinamool Congress. In Kerala, where a Congress-led state
government has been pressing forward with liberalization, the
Left Front won 18 of the states 20 seats, the Congress none.
The depth of the popular anger against big businesss
reform agenda is further manifest in the results from three south
Indian states that have been at the centre of the foreign investment
and information technologies boomAndhra Pradesh, Tamilnadu
and Karnataka. In two of these states, state elections were held
concurrently with the all-India election.
In Andhra Pradesh, the BJP-allied Telugu Desam Party (TDP)
was routed in the state elections, winning just 47 state assembly
seats as compared to 226 for the Congress-led opposition alliance.
The Chief Minister of Andhra Pradesh for nine years, TDP leader
Chandrababu Naidu had become a darling of the World Bank for his
readiness to privatize electricity and otherwise adhere to its
structural adjustment programs. He delighted in calling himself
the CEO of Andhra Pradesh. Together the BJP and TDP won just 5
of Andhra Pradeshs 42 Lok Sabha seats.
In Tamilnadu, the BJP and its ally the All-India Anna Dravida
Munnetra Kazhagam or AIADMK won not a single of the 39 Lok Sabha
seats. The AIADMK, which currently forms Tamilnadus state
government, has won the plaudits of big business for its pro-investment
policies and especially for its use of emergency legislation,
scabs, and mass firings to break a strike last year of 200,000
state government employees.
In Karnataka, the Congress state government, which also has
strongly identified with the drive to make India a magnet for
foreign investment, was pummelled in the state election, losing
seats to the BJP, but especially to an anti-BJP remnant of the
Socialist Party, the Janata Dal (Secular). The Congress may retain
a share of power in Karnatakas state government, but only
if the Janata Dal (Secular) decides to block with it to prevent
the BJP and the rival Janata Dal (United) from forming a minority
government.
Indias economic growth over the past decade has been
heavily concentrated in urban areas. Agriculture, which continues
to employ more than half the workforce, has stagnated, at least
in part because state resources have been diverted from agriculture
to highway-building and other infrastructure projects demanded
by big business.
The backlash against the economic polices of the Indian elite,
however, was by no means just a rural phenomenon. The BJP and
its allies were trounced in Indias major urban centres,
losing seats in Kolkata (Calcutta), Mumbai (Bombay), Chennai (Madras)
and the IT hub Hyderabad. Of Delhis seven Lok Sabha constituencies,
the BJP won only the middle class enclave of South Delhi.
The role of the Congress
The Congress is the historic party of the Indian bourgeoisie.
Its chief utility has been its ability to use anti-imperialist
and socialist verbiage to bind the masses to the program of Indian
capital.
Under M.K. Gandhi, the Congress appealed to worker-peasant
discontent to mount controlled mass movements so as to pressure
the British to the negotiating table. Because it feared that the
mass popular upsurge which erupted in India in the immediate aftermath
of World War II was escaping its control, the Congress moved to
reach a quick settlement with the British in order to stabilize
capitalist rule. In the process, it accepted and imposed the communal
partition of the subcontinent.
Under Jawaharlal Nehru, the Congress used limited land and
other reforms and socialist rhetoric to win popular support for
the bourgeoisies national development project, setting in
place the policies of import substitution and widespread state
ownership of industry that were pursued by all Indian governments
till 1991.
No doubt, in the wake of the 2004 elections big business is
again looking to Congress to contain and divert the popular masses.
But the political and socio-economic dynamics are very different.
The Congress is but a shell of its former self. It is a corrupt
political machine whose connections to the masses long ago atrophied.
The Congress leadership was at least as shocked by the outcome
of the 2004 general election as the BJP. Recognizing that the
media and financial houses were plumping for the BJP, the Congress
began the campaign in a state of disarray and demoralization.
Its best-case scenario was that it could marginally increase on
its 1999 electoral performance, the worst in its history. In what
has become a reflex action for the Congress when in crisis, the
leadership sought to generate enthusiasm among the party apparatus
by conscripting as a star candidate, Rahul Gandhi, whose only
political credentials are, like his motherSonia Gandhia
family tie to the Nehru-Gandhi political dynasty.
Although the Congress will lead Indias next government,
it has not won a parliamentary majority since 1984. In four successive
elections it has captured less than a quarter or the Lok Sabha
seats, and will require the Left Front to muster the Lok Sabha
votes to bring it to power.
Moreover, if the Congress became the vehicle for a mass venting
of popular anger against the reforms, it was largely because of
the support and legitimacy lent it by the Stalinist-controlled
Left Front.
Elections portend social convulsions
The failure of the Indian bourgeoisies post-independence
national project and the social devastation produced by its attempt
to transform India into a cheap labor haven for world capital
has produced a mounting social and political crisis.
While the masses will be looking to the new Congress government
to provide jobs, support for small farmers, and public and social
services, within hours of the elections the Congress leadership
was already making clear it will continue where the BJP left off
in implementing the liberalization agenda of big business.
And it will do so under conditions where the likelihood of
a major international economic crisiswhether due to the
bursting of Chinas investment boom economy or the gargantuan
US government, trade, and current account deficitsis growing
rapidly. And because of Indias increasing integration into
the world capitalist economy, it will not be partially insulated
from such a crisis, as it was from the 1997-98 East Asian economic
meltdown.
In a pre-election analysis of the Indian economy, Moodys
warned about the need for the next Indian government to sharply
curtail spending due to a rising budget deficit. The Congress
election manifesto made an oblique reference to this, saying that
a Congress government would restore fiscal discipline.
The election results thus portend a new period of social convulsions.
Yet if the masses are moving to the left, the Stalinist apparatus
is moving even more emphatically to the right, to support and
likely enter a Congress-led government. The Stalinists justify
allying with the traditional party of the Indian bourgeois on
the grounds that the Hindu supremacist BJP must be thwarted. But
in so far as the working class is prevented from advancing its
own solution to the mounting social crisis, the Congress governments
pursuit of big business reform agenda with Stalinist support
will only provide the ground for the further growth of social
reaction, including all manner of communalist, caste-ist and regionalist
movements that set working people against each other.
The struggle in defence of democratic rights and against communal
reaction cannot be separated from the struggle against Indian
and international capital and for social equality. The Indian
working class must reject the Left Fronts attempts to chain
it to the big business Congress, place itself at the head of the
struggles of the toilers and oppressed, and, by fusing the struggle
of the Indian masses with the world struggle against capitalism,
provide a coherent and viable strategy for their democratic and
social emancipation.
See Also:
India: Stalinists to promote Congress
power bid
[13 May 2004]
The BJPs India Shining
campaign: myth and reality
[7 May 2004]
India: BJP responds to unfavorable polls
by highlighting its Hindu supremacism
[6 May 2004]
Indias elections: the
decline and decay of the Congress Party
[23 April 2004]
Indian general election begins:
Polls indicate race tightening
[22 April 2004]
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