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After an election marred by bitter conflict
Pratibha Patil becomes Indias 13th president
By Arun Kumar and Kranti Kumara
2 August 2007
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Indias recently concluded and bitterly contested presidential
election served to highlight several salient features of contemporary
Indian politics. Most important of these are the crisis wracking
the two largest parties, the Congress Party and the Hindu supremacist
Bharatiya Janata Party, and the crucial role that the Communist
Party of India (Marxist) and its Left Front allies are playing
in sustaining the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA)
coalition government.
Because the presidency is largely a ceremonial position with
little true power except in times of extreme crisis and so as
to bolster the notion that the president is above politics,
Indias political establishment had hitherto maintained a
certain decorum in choosing the countrys president. In presidential
elections past, the opposition frequently did not stand a candidate
or, if it did, mounted only a token campaign.
By contrast, in the run-up to the July 19 presidential election,
the UPA and the rival BJP and its National Democratic Alliance
(NDA) mounted no-holds barred campaigns, including trading accusations
of unsavory, corrupt, and criminal conduct.
Ultimately, the UPA candidate, Pratibha Patil, triumphed, winning
almost two-thirds of the vote of a presidential college
comprised of the members of the state, territorial, and national
legislatures. Pivotal to the UPA victory was the support given
its candidate by the Left Front and, to a lesser degree, by the
Bahujan Samaj Party, which forms the government in Indias
most populous state, Uttar Pradesh.
A retired Congress politician and at the time of the presidential
contest the governor of Rajasthan, Patil was sworn in as Indias
thirteen president on July 25.
The Congress, however, has little to celebrate. Patil is a
colourless non-entity and is known to have been the UPAs
fifth or sixth choice for the joba compromise
candidate proposed after the Congress, its UPA allies, and the
Left Front had gone through weeks of fractious negotiations.
Patils chief credentials for the job were that she is
a woman and has an unblemished record as faithful toady of the
Nehru-Gandhi dynasty that dominates the Congress Party apparatus.
If this were not bad enough, the BJP was soon able to rake
up a series of scandals in which Patil or members of her family
were implicated. These included her brothers reputed involvement
in the murder of a rival Congress Party activist and allegations
that a bank Patil had helped found, with the ostensible aim of
providing credit to the less privileged, went bankrupt after steering
loans to members of her extended family.
While not endorsing the tenor of the BJPs anti-Patil
campaign, much of the corporate media expressed concern that she
is not above suspicion. Typical was the reaction of
India Today magazine, which called her an embarrassing
choice.
Initially the leaders of the Stalinist Communist Party of India
(Marxist) enthusiastically promoted Patils candidacy on
the grounds that the selection of a woman-president would constitute
a blow to gender oppression. However, as the stench surrounding
Patil began to emerge, they took to hiding their embarrassment
behind plastic smiles.
If the presidential election damaged the credibility of the
Congress and the UPA, it was nothing short of a disaster for the
opposition parties.
The attempt of the third-front United National
Progressive Alliance (UNPA), a newly formed alliance of regional
parties, to put up its own candidate fizzled. Ultimately it chose
to abstain, but many AIDMK legislators broke ranks and voted for
the BJP-supported candidate.
Since falling from power in 2004, the BJP, to the chagrin of
much of Indias corporate elite, has refused to play the
role of a loyal opposition. Instead, it has sought
at every opportunity to destabilize the UPA government, through
obstruction or by mounting provocations. In keeping with this
attitude, the BJP decided to mount a vigorous challenge for the
presidency.
As its candidate the BJP chose Bhairon Singh Shekhawat, the
sitting vice president. Although Shekhawat was formerly a top
BJP leader and is reputedly a lifelong member of the fascistic
RSS, the BJP claimed that he was an independent candidate
rather than a party nominee.
This backfired badly. The BJP had hoped to get the UNPAs
support, but it balked at endorsing a candidate who as Rajasthans
Chief Minister in the early 1990s had given full support to the
communalist agitation that culminated in the razing of the Babri
Masjid (mosque) in Ayodhya and the worst communal bloodletting
since Partition. Meanwhile several of the BJPs NDA allies
sought to use the claim that Shekhawat was an independent candidate
to justify their breaking ranks with the BJP.
In the end, some of the BJPs most important NDA allies,
the ultra-right wing, Maharashtran-based Shiv Sena and the Trinamul
Congress of West Bengal, failed to support Shekhawat. The Shiv
Senas legislators voted for the UPA nominee Patil on the
grounds that they could not oppose a fellow Maharashtran.
There is now a serious question mark over the future of the
NDA, at least as an alliance with sufficient regional support
to form an alternative government.
In pursuit of various inner-party quarrels, even some BJP legislators
in BJP-governed Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh rebelled, by either
voting for the UPAs Patil or by writing Hindu religious
slogans on their pro-Shekhawat ballots, thus invalidating them.
Coalition politics and popular alienation
Under Indias British-derived parliamentary system, the
president is nominally the head of state and commander of the
armed forces, but, is expected in virtually all matters and at
virtually all times to bow to the wishes of the sitting prime
minister and parliament. However, under conditions where no party
secures a parliamentary majority at the polls, or the government
falls, the president plays a pivotal role in deciding which party
or alliance of parties is given the opportunity to form a new
government or whether fresh elections should be held.
The presidents role in government formation is certainly
a key reason why the presidency has now become the object of bitter
political struggle.
From 1947 to 1989, the Congress formed Indias government
for all but two years and always did so commanding a parliamentary
majority. Since then, India has been governed by a succession
of minority and coalition governments.
The BJP-led NDA, which held office from 1998 to 2004, was comprised
of more than twenty parties, although the BJP was far and away
the most important constituent. The UPA is coalition of a dozen
parties, but still requires the support of the 60-plus Left Front
to survive in office.
Moreover, neither the Congress nor they BJP can look to the
next general election, scheduled for 2009, with any confidence.
The Congress has lost office in several states in the past year
and both parties suffered a debacle in Mays Uttar Pradesh
state election.
Only as the leader of a multi-party coalition involving a host
of smaller regional and caste-ist-parties can either the Congress
or BJP realistically hope to win office at the next election.
Hence the overriding interest in having a friendly
president.
The continuing erosion of support for both of the Indian bourgeoisies
principal political formations, is rooted in the mass opposition
to the neo-liberal policies they have implemented. Privatisation,
deregulation, social spending cuts and the reduction of agricultural
price supports have resulted in increasing economic insecurity
and social inequality.
As of yet this opposition has found only distorted and confused
expression. Here the role of the CPM and its sister Stalinist
party, the Communist Party of India (CPI), have been decisive.
The Stalinists have supported the Indian bourgeoisie in effecting
a strategic turn over the past 15 years, from a strategy based
on state-led capitalist development to export-led growth and a
new and closer alliance with international capital.
The Stalinist parties helped prop up the Narasimha Rao Congress
government that initiated neo-liberal reform in 1991, and were
the architects of the Third Front government of 1996-8 that pressed
forward with the program of making India a cheap labour haven
for global capitalist production. In the 2004 elections, the Left
Front mustered support for the Congress and subsequently helped
write the Common Minimum Program, the document that serves as
a cover for the UPAs pro-big business agenda. In those states
where the Left Front holds office, it has ruthlessly implemented
pro-investor policies, including shooting down peasants at Nandigram,
West Bengal, opposed to the seizure of their land for a special
economic zone.
At the same time, the Stalinist parties have organized various
protest movements and one-day general strikes to channel the mass
opposition back toward the existing political structures.
In an attempt to place some rhetorical distance between it
and the UPA government, the CPI recently called for the Left Front
to review its relations with the UPA. However, the
CPM leadership quickly shot down this proposal. It declared such
a review pointless, since there can be no question of withdrawing
support for the UPA. Both Stalinist parties have justified their
support for the current Congress-led government on the grounds
that it is the only means of blocking the return to power of the
BJP.
Initially the CPM did suggest that it might support a candidate
other than that nominated by the Congress in the election for
vice-president to be held later this month. However, after the
presidential debacle the CPM leadership concluded such a manoeuvre
could further destabilize the UPA. Instead it took the initiative
in steering the UPA to quickly arrive at a consensus vice-presidential
candidate.
In secret consultations the CPM urged the Congress to make
Mohammad Hamid, the head of the National Commission for Minorities,
its candidate. When the Congress agreed, CPM General Secretary
Prakash Karat accepted Congress President Sonia Gandhis
request that he convince the Congresss UPA allies to rally
behind Hamids candidacy.
Thus the CPM is not just propping up the Congress-led UPA.
It plays a pivotal role in the inner working and dynamics of the
UPA itself. Such is the integration of the CPM into the political
establishment, there was even talk in the corporate media that
the current speaker of parliament, CPM leader Somnath Chatterjee,
might be the UPAs vice-presidential nominee.
There has been much hand wringing in the corporate media over
the presidential election. Indias elite is concerned that
the presidency has been politically weakened, with the result
that Patil may lack the popular legitimacy to intervene effectively
in a future crisis. Many of the same newspaper editorialists who
chastised the Congress for foisting the feeble and tarnished Patil
on the nation, are now demanding that the opposition rally behind
the new president.
Declared the Deccan Chronicle, The nation will
hope and pray that Ms Patils assumption of the high office
will erase the rancour, bitterness and naked partisanship that
sullied the presidential contest, and herald a democratically
healthier atmosphere of political accommodation and understanding
enabling her to discharge her constitutional obligations ... Uninhibited
and uninfluenced by the compulsions of past political associations
and loyalties, Ms Patil must let the Constitution
be her sole guide, national interests her sole motivation and
impartiality and fairness her abiding principles.
See Also:
Voters in Indias most
populous state spurn traditional parties
[16 May 2007]
In wake of Nandigram massacre
West Bengals Stalinist chief minister invited to Washington
[21 April 2007]
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