[ This article was published in the New Indian Express on 15.1.2018 under the title A HOPE LOST TO POLITICS AS USUAL ]
The late Nirad C
Choudhry’s definition of India as the continent of Circe, where humans are
transmogrified into a lesser species, is particularly true of politics in
India, and the latest evidence of this is the transformation of Arvind
Kejriwal. Never before in the history of politics in India had a party, and
that too a two year old fledgling ranged against an all conquering behemoth
like the BJP, ever won 99.5% of seats in an election. Mr. Kejriwal and his AAP
achieved this in the 2015 elections in Delhi, winning 67 of the 70 seats. He
did this on the back of a desperate yearning for a change, not just in
government but in the very nature and quality of politics in the country. The
people brought in the BJP to replace the Congress in Parliament in 2014 because
they wanted to change the government. But they brought in Kejriwal in Delhi in
2015 because they wanted to change the very essence, values and idiom of
politics in the country, not just the government. The transformation sought was
far more basic and elemental and Kejriwal was the Merlin who could do this.
Cleaning out these
Augean stables was no easy task, what with 70 years of accumulated political
ordure. The long suffering citizens were not unaware of this and were prepared
to make allowances for the inexperience and administrative immaturity of a
greenhorn party, and they have been keeping the faith these last two years and
more. They have consistently overlooked, if not forgiven, Kejriwal for his many
mistakes: the dog fights with the Prime Minister and the Lieutenant Governor,
the expulsion of Prashant Bhushan and Yogendra Yadav, the distancing from other
AAP stalwarts like Anjali Damania and Mayank Gandhi, the dubious ticket
distribution in Punjab, the hobnobbing with Khalistanis, the open support to the
Art of Living’s desecration of the Yamuna floodplains, the failure to improve
Delhi’s transport problems, the appointment of as many as 21 MLAs as
Parliamentary Secretaries in order to circumvent the constitutional provisions.
The people perceived these mistakes as errors of judgement and continued to
repose their faith in AAP and Kejriwal for one reason, and one reason only: his
appeal to a higher political standard. Indian polity has always lacked a moral
and ethical underpinning, an honest and principled core, the nucleus of
compassion, humaneness and tolerance around which all civilised nations and
societies are built. In him and in AAP many Indians saw a vague outline of a
path leading back to our moral roots, and so they persevered; for all his
faults, they reasoned, here was a politician who would never compromise on the
one value that is a complete stranger to politics in India- probity, rectitude
and integrity. Like Moses he would take us to the promised land, we were
prepared to wait- after all, didn’t the Hebrews wander in the deserts for forty
years, and didn’t the Pandavas spend years in exile, before they gained their
goals?
We have been
betrayed. By Mr. Kejriwal himself. He has nominated to the Rajya Sabha two
individuals- Sushil Gupta, a businessman and N.D. Gupta, a Chartered
Accountant- who have absolutely nothing to recommend themselves for the
historic role of the first ever AAP MPs
in the Upper House.This was a momentous opportunity for the AAP to nominate
persons of eminence and gravitas, to depart from the general practice of
awarding hangers on, sycophants, financiers, cronies, to demonstrate that it
really was a party with a difference. The Guptas, however, are nobodies; rich,
no doubt, but with no track record of any public service or contribution to the
polity or society. Could Mr. Kejriwal not find even two individuals from among
the hundreds who gave selflessly of themselves in the India Against Corruption
movement or later to his own party? Is his party so devoid of quality and talent
that he had to go shopping in the same bazaar other parties customise? These,
and other, questions are being raised but Kejriwal, for a change, has gone
silent. Like a Prime Minister he has frequently questioned for his silences,
Kejriwal too is in mute mode: he has not uttered one word of explanation for
his disgraceful decision, or clarified what his party stands to gain by these
inexplicable choices. Perhaps there ARE no explanations, perhaps the only
gainer is Mr. Kejriwal himself and not his party, perhaps he has given up the
fight and is preparing to fold up his tent and steal away into the night with
whatever he can. There is something rotten here and his staunchest supporters (
like me) cannot ignore the overpowering stench emanating from these
nominations.
The Aam Aadmi Party
has just been murdered by its own founder. It has renounced the only values
that were its USP, that made it different from other parties- its clean,
uncompromising, idealistic, honest image. It is now just another party. I am
reminded of the concluding sentences in George Orwell’s book Animal Farm: there
came a stage when it was difficult to tell who were the pigs and who the
humans, they had become one and the same. This will be the epitaph of the AAP.
And what about us, the ordinary citizens, who were promised so much? We will
continue to wait for a Godot who will never come or, if he comes at all, will
only flatter to deceive. Like one Arvind Kejriwal.
Congratulations for having diagnosed AAP and Mr. Kejriwal long ago!
ReplyDeleteNow (20 February 2018) comes the clinching finale - getting the top most bureaucrat of the State beaten up at midnight in his own official residence by none other than his own party MLAs.
Nadir reached? Not yet. LG and similar other authorities are yet to be dealt with by AAP in its own characteristic style acquired recently.
This is now a fit case of breakdown of Constitutional Machinery in the State. He deserves dismissal right away.