Congress must take steps to close its fault lines (Part-I)
December 2nd, 2010 - 5:18 pm ICT by ANI
By B. I. Saini
New Delhi, Dec 2 (ANI): Nobody would have thought in May 2009, when the Congress led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) won another mandate from the Indian people, that the coalition would run out of steam in just about a year and a half.
Though it would not be prudent to write off the alliance at present, the fault lines in the combine cannot be hidden any longer. The Congress, the leading light of the coalition, it is apparent, would be the worst hit if steps are not taken soon to check the decline in its fortunes.
When the Congress won 200 plus seats in the Lok Sabha in 2009, it was seen as a major landmark on the way to the revival of the party.
From being the natural party of governance in the country, from Independence in 1947 to the end of the Rajiv Gandhi era in 1989, the party had fallen on bad days and forced to sit in the opposition during the post 1996 period till 2004.
Even during the period 1991-96, it was able to form a government under P.V. Narasimha Rao, only because of the sympathy wave following Rajiv Gandhi’s assassination.
Though very little separated the Congress from the BJP in 2004 in terms of the number of seats won in the Lok Sabha elections, the party was able to form a coalition with other non-BJP parties with the support of the Left parties, given the desire of major elements in the polity not to allow saffron forces to continue with their grip on the levers of power.
The Congress built on the gains made during the first five year tenure of the United Progressive Alliance to come up with a sterling performance in the 2009 Lok Sabha elections.
The party was no doubt helped a great deal by the clean image of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and the role played by the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty political heir Rahul Gandhi in galvanizing the party in the key state of Uttar Pradesh.
But developments in the last few months have greatly eroded the credibility of the party. Scams after scams have been coming to light in the recent past, which have dented the Teflon-coated image of Dr. Manmohan Singh as a person untainted with corruption.
Congress president Sonia Gandhi very rightly asserted the other day that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is 100 percent honest. This is no doubt a positive quality for a private person or a personal friend, but obviously the person heading an organization or a country as head of government has to be more than just personally honest.
As the head of the Indian government, it is Dr. Manmohan Singh’s duty to ensure that people around him - his ministerial colleagues and others - do not transgress the norms of probity.
The impression is gaining ground that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has not been able to curb corruption around him. There has been a succession of charges of corruption against key functionaries of the government involved in the 2-G spectrum allocation, organisation of the Commonwealth Games and the Adarsh Housing Society; to name just a few.
One factor which is common in all these cases is the failure of those in authority, and whose responsibility it was, to take any credible action to check corrupt practices till they were forced to do so by the pressure of public opinion.
The 2-G spectrum scam is inherited from the first stint in power of the United Progressive Alliance. The Comptroller and Audition General report may have pin-pointed the huge loss caused to the national exchequer now, but rumblings about the irregularities and lack of honest practices in allocating the scarce spectrum have been there for a long time and there was no effective action to put a stop to the rot.
There is no doubt that the opposition insistence on a joint parliamentary committee probe into the 2-G spectrum scam, apart from the Commonwealth Games irregularities and corruption and the Adarsh Housing Society scandal is politically motivated. But this is only natural as both the government and the opposition are playing the political game of one-upmanship.
It is true that the hands of the principal opposition party, the BJP, may not be as clean as they are claiming. For this, one just has to look at how the BJP high command has allowed Karnataka Chief Minister B.S. Yeddyurappa to continue in office despite there being credible accounts of how he flouted rules and regulations to allot government land to his kith and kin for a pittance.
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