We the Voters ..... The electorate can make a beginning by electing only decent and honest law makers and rejecting tainted aspirants, regardless of their party affiliation. Unless and until we the voters assert ourselves, we will continue to have representatives who are unworthy of our confidence.
Devendra Saksena | SNS | New Delhi | May 13, 2019 : There was a time when dressing in hand-spun khadi was de
rigueur for politicians. No longer. Led by our Prime Minister,
politicians now dress like dandies. With enormous wealth at there
disposal, particularly those who have been successful in the elections,
the buzzword of the first decades after Independence ~ “Simple living,
high thinking” ~ appears have lapsed in the limbo of history.
The difference between present-day politics and politics of the early
days is fundamental. Earlier, people used to join politics for
advancing some cause like social or economic justice, but present-day
politics is only about grabbing power with the ultimate aim of personal
aggrandizement. The sharp increase in the worth of politicians in
successive elections would testify to the truth of this observation.
Mahatma Gandhi had lived his entire life in self-imposed penury.
Our first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, who was born with a
silver spoon, did not leave behind anything of value except his
ancestral house. Lal Bahadur Shastri’s simplicity was legendary.
However, things changed by the 1980s. The freedom-fighting generation
was nearly extinct; a new species of worldly-wise politicians had
replaced them. Having witnessed the postretirement woes of their
predecessors, the new entrants secured their future by voting themselves
lifelong pensions and hefty pay revisions. Moreover, earning money by
questionable means was no longer taboo; the Bofors scandal, in which the
top political leadership appeared to be involved, had set a dubious
precedent.
Also, by the 1980s with the rising population, constituencies had
become unmanageably large and candidates found it difficult to connect
with voters. Candidates then started campaigning with long cavalcades of
cars blaring election slogans and plastering walls with election
graffiti. After Mr TN Seshan put an end to these malpractices,
candidates wooed voters with freebies like colour TV, gold coins, sarees
and the like. Later, the largesse was institutionalised with parties
offering free rice and a variety of subsidies in their manifestos.
Politics has moved a step further now; parties now offer caste-based
reservations and cash incentives like PMKisan, Nyay, and Kalia. In this
scheme of things, the party has gained in importance while the role of
the candidate has become secondary. Meanwhile, industrialists and
musclemen, who had supported politicians from behind the curtains,
stepped out in the open. The public did not object to the presence of
moneybags and dubious characters in politics because politics by then
had become transactional.
The public wanted a representative who would help them with the
police or administration rather than a principled person who would not
support them if they were in the wrong. Things have deteriorated to the
extent that voters of the new millennium neither know nor care about the
person they elect. Huge cash and liquor seizures during elections show
that many electors prefer instant gratification rather than giving the
candidates a chance to fulfil their promises.
In any case, manifestos of most political parties are similar; in
essence, every manifesto promises everything to everyone. It is quite
another matter that few of the promises are ever realised; no party
believes that it should be held accountable for not fulfilling the
promises it made for getting elected. The road to power is straight.
Political parties categorise voters according to their castes or
religion; the voter acquiesces in this classification because a leader
of the same caste or religion may help him after getting elected.
Most parties unashamedly employ strongmen who bring votes by
appealing to the caste and religious sentiments of voters and if that
fails, by bribing or terrorising voters. Politicians now have the
temerity to say openly that after being elected they will only entertain
persons who had voted for them. Election after election, we see the
same persons vying for office, though their party may have changed in
the interim. More often than not, the progeny of politicians themselves
become politicians.
Election affidavits reveal that the worth of our richest politicians
easily surpasses a few thousand crore rupees and the majority of our
parliamentarians are crorepatis. We have to accept that politics is now a
profession and a disreputable one at that. Amongst other things, public
representatives have been caught voting for money, asking questions for
money and watching pornography in the Assembly. It is an open secret
that any person seriously contesting parliamentary elections requires a
war chest of several crores.
Despite a ceiling on the amount of election expenditure, an unlimited
amount of money can be spent on electioneering by political parties
because the amount spent by parties is not included in computing the
money spent by the individual candidate. Power being their ultimate
goal, parties see no harm in spending humongous amounts for the success
of their candidates. This squashes the chances of honest, ordinary
persons ever entering Parliament.
Which is a pity because Parliament is supposed to represent the
general public, the daridra narayan of Gandhiji, not moneybags or
goondas alone. Loan defaulters, dons, religious charlatans all have
represented us in Parliament. Carrying the matter to its logical
conclusion, a national party has now fielded a lady accused of terrorist
offences as also a person named in 242 FIRs. The 255th Report of the
Law Commission on Electoral Reforms pointed out that unregulated or
under-regulated election financing could lead to “lobbying and capture,
where a sort of quid pro quo transpires between big donors and political
parties/ candidates.”
This observation assumes added importance in light of the opacity of
donations made through the recently introduced Electoral Bonds.
Incidentally, 95 per cent of donations through Electoral Bonds have gone
to the ruling party. As far back as 2014, on a PIL filed by the
Association for Democratic Reforms, the Delhi High Court had held that
both the Congress and the BJP had violated the Foreign Contribution
Regulation Act (FCRA) by accepting contributions from overseas donors.
The Government’s response was to amend FCRA in 2016 to nullify the
High Court’s judgment. When that proved insufficient, FCRA was again
amended in 2018. This sequence of events would show the absence of any
intention to curb foreign funding for elections, which could be from
dodgy sources. During a pre-election meeting with political parties in
August 2018, the Election Commission suggested a cap of 50 per cent of
the expenditure ceiling limit per candidate for election spending by
political parties. This was endorsed by all parties except the ruling
party.
Unsurprisingly, the proposal to limit expenditure is yet to see the
light of the day. The current elections have seen politicians plumbing
the depths of indecency with their egregious behaviour and objectionable
statements. As we approach the final phases, one is not sure if the
nadir of political discourse has been reached or if we would be witness
to further ignominy. Playing the devil’s advocate, one can say that
Parliamentarians being part of our society are people like us.
Indeed, Indian society has a surfeit of persons who are literate but
not educated, who have convictions but not values and it would indeed be
strange if we would not find such people aspiring for political office.
Attempts by the Courts to keep out criminals and the efforts of the
Election Commission to prevent the use of money and muscle power in
elections have not borne fruit. The Supreme Court had ordered that cases
against politicians be fasttracked; the UP Government promptly
responded by withdrawing all such cases. Nothing is ever heard about the
thousands of FIRs filed for violation of the Model Code of Conduct
during elections.
A new low was reached when cowed down by the fear of displeasing
politicians, the Election Commission pleaded in the Supreme Court that
it had no power to punish for infringement of its Model Code of Conduct.
Everyone agrees that reform in electoral laws is needed for better
people to be elected to legislative bodies. Precisely for this reason,
legislators are loath to change the election law. For example, the
Women’s Reservation Bill, which would reserve 33 per cent of seats for
women in the Lok Sabha and State legislative assemblies, has been
hanging fire for the last 11 years.
Perhaps, we can have a level playing field if the ceiling for
election expenditure is brought to a really low limit so that even an
ordinary citizen can vie for electoral office and violations of the
expenditure limit can be detected. Then, canvassing through the
electronic or print media, which is prohibitively expensive, would not
be possible, forcing candidates to have personal contact with voters.
Voters would then be able to form an informed judgment about their
candidates rather than being swayed by alluring visuals and melodious
tunes.
Again, with rising literacy and increased longevity, educational and
age criteria can be laid down for public representatives. It should also
be ensured that candidates for electoral office have some knowledge of
law, public administration and finance. Further, to ensure a better
quality of debate and more honest voting in Parliament, the procedure of
the Lok Sabha could be amended so that the Government would fall only
if a motion of no-confidence is passed. This change may encourage
parties to field better quality candidates who would not be mere rubber
stamps of the leaders.
Till the time the Election Commission, Parliament and the Supreme
Court concur to give us better electoral laws and better
representatives, we the voters can make a beginning by electing only
decent and honest law makers and rejecting tainted aspirants, regardless
of their party affiliation. Unless and until we the voters assert
ourselves, we will continue to have representatives who are unworthy of
our confidence.
(The writer is a retired Principal Chief Commissioner of Income-Tax)
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