Friday, 2 December 2022

EXPECTING A TN SESHAN IN NAYA BHARAT IS A PIPE DREAM

   I guess, in these Orwellian times, we should be grateful for small mercies. Which is why we should be relieved that the five judge Constitution bench has finally taken up the issue of the independence of the Election Commission, seven years after various PILs were filed on the subject. One is also happy with the stern and questioning posture adopted by the bench, which too is a bit of a rarity these days. And one is not surprised at the govt's usual evasive, defiant, and talking-down stance, reiterating its old chestnut about separation of powers of the executive/ legislature and the judiciary. Separation of powers is a valid tenet only if these powers are exercised legitimately, as they were intended to be- if they are not, then the Courts are justified, nay required, to cross the Laxman Rekha and restore some semblance of constitutional rule.

  That the Election Commission is living on its past glory cannot be denied by any right thinking person; the only point to be debated is whether it is a vestigial appendage of the PMO or the Home Ministry. The strange scheduling of the Himachal and Gujarat elections, the silence on the questionable opening of an unscheduled window for Electoral bonds, the rushed appointment of an Election Commissioner- these are only the latest examples of its completely compromised status. It no longer enjoys the trust of the Opposition parties or vast swathes of the public, it maintains a silence like a Trappist monk on all criticism, it does not respond to the public or other stakeholders, it does not deign to explain any of its actions. 

  In the last couple of days at least two former Chief Election Commissioners have spoken out and have supported the Supreme Court's forensic investigation into the ECI's functioning. Mr. M. S. Gill and SY Quereshi have revealed that they had, in their time, taken up with the govt. of the day the issue of reforms in the procedure for appointment of Election Commissioners to ensure their independence. This issue was important then too, but right now it has become a make or break concern for the very survival of democracy for India. A few more years of this and we would be living the Stalin quote: the person who counts the vote is more important than the person who casts the vote. And the Supreme Court was perhaps also alluding to this danger when it invoked the tenure of the now legendary T.N.Seshan, CEC from 1990 to 1996, as a model and a benchmark. 

  T.N.Seshan was the stuff legends are made of. By his own confession at a press meet he "ate politicians for breakfast"; he made himself completely independent from the government, even asking the Law Ministry not to address letters to his office as " Election Commission of India, Govt. of India" as he was not part of the govt. but a separate entity; in August 1993 he issued a 17 page order deferring all elections till such time as the govt. gave him funds to implement the scheme of Voter ID cards ( he had his way); after the death of Rajiv Gandhi he postponed elections without consulting the central govt.; he put the fear of God into politicians, civil servants and polling staff. He gave full protection to his Observers and ensured they had the final word over the state satraps, and their reports were implemented immediately, without any long drawn inquiries ( which is the norm these days). I did three separate stints as Observer under him: on one occasion, having personally witnessed "booth capturing" at a couple of booths in Bihar, I recommended repolling: within two hours the orders arrived from Delhi. He introduced Voter ID cards, the Model Code of Conduct, the system of Election Observers, among other reforms. Seshan, in short, cleaned up much of the rot that had set in in the preceding forty years.

  But carbon dating the history of the Election Commision, or singing paeans to his memory is not the solution to the terminal decline in our electoral processes. The rot which has metastasized again in the 25 years after him cannot be cured by harking back to his days. Because the context has changed and the reality of today is vastly different from Seshan's days. The govts then were not brazenly contemptuous of the law, they were sensitive to public opinion and criticism by the press, the media still retained more than a modicum of courage and independence, the judiciary could still confront the state, constitutional bodies still had the respect and trust of the people, the bureaucracy had not yet been bludgeoned into compliance (notwithstanding Mrs. Gandhi's theory of a "committed" bureaucracy), the populace had not been turned into fawning zealots of an intolerant ideology. These were the strengths on which Seshan could draw on when standing up to the govt., not just his famous Palghat Brahmin obduracy. The vision, courage and initiative were his, but the eco-system supported him, giving him the confidence to persist. All that has changed now, especially in the last eight years. 

  That vital eco-system of checks and balances has all but collapsed, dismantled piece by piece in classic Gestapo fashion: compartmentalise the stakeholders into separate ghettos, and then demolish the ghettos one by one till all that is left is one huge wasteland. The ruling party appears almost unchallengeable, bolstered by a brute legislative majority, unlimited funds and a brutish cadre. It has no respect for, or fear of, any of the agencies or institutions mentioned in the previous para. This govt. has demonstrated time and again that it can make short work of any functionary- even judges- it finds inconvenient, or not compliant or submissive.

  Consider the manner of the midnight removal of the CBI (Central Bureau of Investigation) Director Alok Verma in 2019 when news emerged that he could file an FIR in the Rafael matter. Or how Election Commissioner Ashok Lavasa was hounded and forced to quit ( and allow himself to be kicked upstairs to the Asian Development Bank) when he started giving dissenting notes and recommending action against some BJP leaders for violation of the Model Code of Conduct. Or the punishment meted out to Sanjiv Bhatt, the Gujarat cadre IPS officer who had deposed against Mr. Modi and Shah in the 2002 riots case- he is now serving a life  sentence in a three decade old case for daring to speak out. Or R.B.Sreekumar, former Director General of Police, arrested ( along with Teesta Setalvad) for demanding accountability for the 2002 killings. These examples can be multiplied manifold, but they should suffice to prove that there are no Laxman Rekhas for this regime when it comes to throttling dissent or wreaking vengeance when exposed or thwarted in its designs. It does not fear any judicial intervention or check, as has been proved time and again.

  Could even somebody like T N Seshan have stood up to the unlimited powers of such an authoritarian state, in the kind of defenestrated eco-system that exists today? Would his integrity, commitment and courage have been enough to counter the CBI, ED (Enforcement Directorate), Income Tax, lap dog media and other agencies that would surely have been deployed against him in order to reign him in or to get rid of him? I doubt it.

  Which is why, though I welcome the inquisition of the five judge bench on the process of appointment of Election Commissioners, I don't expect much from it. The facade of having the CJI (Chief Justice of India) on the Selection Committee will be just that- a facade, a cosmetic job to hide the deficiencies underneath. Many CJIs of late have not covered themselves in glory, and the process of THEIR appointments is not much better than that of the Election Commissioners, either.

  The manner of appointment itself is meaningless if the executive can continue to bribe, coerce or intimidate a Chief Executive to either do its bidding or face the consequences. The CJI is on the panel for selection of the CBI Director but that did not prevent the organisation from turning thoroughly partisan and compliant; it also did not protect a Director from being evicted in a midnight coup when he tried to do his job. The Supreme Court has also not been able (or willing) to enforce its own orders in the matter of another Director of another agency getting a third extension of service in spite of the court putting a bar on it.

  It's high time (because time is running out) that we stopped fooling ourselves and grasped the nettle. The real problem is not the selection process ( which can certainly be improved upon) or the appointees. The problem is one of protecting the appointees from the tyranny of a government which will stop at nothing to have its way. Our failure lies here, and the fault lies with the higher judiciary, which is more concerned with protecting its own turf than the nation. Our courts have not been able to protect even one of the officers in the preceding paragraphs; in fact, they have usually ruled on the side of the executive, more concerned with technicalities than the larger picture. Further, the Supreme Court's reluctance to take up cases challenging some of the govt's controversial policies and decisions has only emboldened the executive to keep on pushing the envelope. In such a degraded system even T.N.Seshan would have been rendered ineffective and summarily evicted from the Commission to a rueful retirement, if not worse. In a democracy the judiciary is the final frontier, and if that too crumbles, then democracy cannot survive.

  This is not to say that we do not need a Seshan today: how can we not, in a country where the Home Minister can openly boast with total impunity at an election rally that the Gujarat pogrom of 2002 which saw the massacre of almost 2000 people was a "lesson" for a community, and where the Chief Justice of India shockingly admits that judges are "afraid" to grant bail? We desperately need a Seshan - but not just in the Election Commission: the country needs a TN Seshan in the Supreme Court.


7 comments:

  1. I hope you have your affairs in order, my friend Avay.

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  2. To feel that the country is hurtling from one disaster to the other, like a snowball getting bigger as it gathers speed down the slopes, will be throwing oneself to limitless gloom.
    The new CJI has done well to acknowledge the fear in judges of the lower Courts to grant bail. This is a credible starter. It may be the leavening for the lower Courts to shrug their inertia and rise to the aid of a populace bent by a shackling Executive. The shocker lies in the office of the Chief Election Commission having become a chained pet of the current dispensation from 2014. As have the other institutions of control. When a governing regime's functional bent seems to veer towards Manusmriti and Chanakya Niti more than towards the Constitution, the arms of Democracy find themselves restrained with less room to manoeuvre.
    One pins hope on the current CJI to display depth and resurrect the Judiciary that has got unperched occasionally, when some Judges have stunned the people with their verdict. Is he the AlSeshan watchdog in the making? The Collegium system itself is one that is accused of opacity. But that noise comes essentially from this regime which clearly wishes to have a stronger hand in the recruitment of judges. And periodically from retired Judges who were chosen through the same Collegium.

    Mr. Shukla has shifted spectrum from the funny and flaming to the fractious and fretsome in the span of a week, like a pendulous mood swing. It is hoped the coming election results provide him the fillip to cast away his pessimism and unearth new expectations in the wintry snowfields.

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    1. I wish that I could share even a little bit of the unending optimism that you possess. Sadly, nothing gives me reason for hope, not after having just spent six weeks there, following my 93 year old mother's demise. People are so scared and so careful of what they say, that I found it impossible to have any meaningful dialogue, The country has most definitely descended into a macabre state, and I don't know if it will ever emerge from this state in my lifetime at least.

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  3. An incisive and realistic, if pessimistic, take on the present national context. A brave outpouring, but it's doubtful the powers that be will be bothered about it's impact on the populace at large, for three reasons:
    1. Written in English; how many will ever see it, let alone read it?
    2. Of those that do, how many even appreciate the significance of a Constitution or the principle of the Separation of Powers? And -
    3. 'Democracy' and all the concepts and institutions on which it rests, were always a foreign/Western/alien import into our centuries-old culture of bowing to (and partnering with) the dominant power of the day. What made Mughal and British rule so easy.

    Seems we are merely 'reverting to type' after 70-odd years of an aberration.

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  4. As a country we have sunk to the bottom of a virtual cess pool. Our so called 'democracy' can now very easily be filed away as being part of our often touted 'glorious past' because what we are today is a total dictatorship with a barely concealing fig leaf which the powers that be, even in the UN, wave around by tom-tomming ours as being the largest democracy in the world.
    All the institutions, each and every one, is now lorded over by the hatchet men with not even a modicum of independence. The country needs not one but a whole legion of T.N.Seshan’s to shake up the executive by the scruff of its neck for the various bodies to regain at least a bit of the autonomy they were supposed to function with.
    As to the once grand ECI, the lot at the top of that once venerable body need to pull their heads from out of the sand into which they have stuck theirs in VERY deep, all the way to their necks!

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  5. Agree with NJC. Not only do Mr Shukla's pieces need much wider dissemination, but it would be a great service to the country if someone could translate these into our many mother tongues and put on social media?

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  6. Pessimism, dropped shoulders, hollow and mirthless laughs of defeatist acceptance, cynicism - are useless blunt tools with which to make incision into the hard veneer of authoritarianism.
    It took the RSS and Jan Sangh - later the BJP - eight decades and some years more to keep ploughing their Hindutva furrow before they got their crop. When Indira Gandhi fettered them harshly with the Emergency, they hardened more to be what they are today.
    The limited point being that moping and sighing for a change is futile. The need is to stay unshaking to one's belief. And get the masses to shake theirs. Like the BJP peddled the (now proven fake) narrative of corruption to the extent that it became the truth and the polity shifted.
    Bleating for multiple Seshans to rescue the institutions from the grip of the current regime will do little to loosen it.
    Delhi is a done deal; so is Punjab; Himachal could be on the 8th December; the South holds its own; Bengal too; JK is not being taken to polls for obvious reasons; if an alignment could be achieved on the common fulcrum of defeating this regime in 2024, Mr. Zafar Shariff may see his dream fulfilled far sooner than later.

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