People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVIII
No. 07 February 16, 2014 |
The Emerging Alternative
Prakash Karat
AS the Lok Sabha
elections draw near,
it has become clear that the electoral battle will be between
not two but three
combinations – the Congress-led UPA, the BJP-led NDA and the
non-Congress
non-BJP combination of parties.
NO TWO-WAY
CONTEST
This was not what
the BJP or the
Congress had envisaged a few months ago. After Narendra Modi
was anointed as
the prime ministerial candidate of the BJP with the
intervention of the RSS in
September last year, there was a veritable media blitz of the
Modi for PM
campaign. After
the Congress decided
that Rahul Gandhi would be at the helm of the Congress
campaign, the fight was portrayed
as one between Modi, the doer, versus an inept Rahul Gandhi. This was an ideal
combat for the BJP with all
the odds in favour of Modi.
However, the falsity
of such a staged
contest has become apparent in the past few weeks. This is not
going to be a
contest between two leaders, or two parties, or even two
alliances.
The run-up to the
Lok Sabha elections
is taking place in the background of a deteriorating economy.
Rampant price
rise, loss of livelihood of poor peasants and agricultural
workers and the
growing ranks of the unemployed are accompanied by miserable
living conditions
with health, education and housing facilities beyond the reach
of the poor.
These are the results of the neo-liberal policies assiduously
pursued by the
Manmohan Singh government.
Loot of
natural resources and massive corruption are its outcome. The
social impact of
this rapacious neo-liberal regime is seen in the widespread
and horrific
attacks on women and the brutal repression on people fighting
for their
rights.
The responsibility
for all these
rests squarely on the Congress and the UPA.
The Congress is, thus, fast losing ground among the
people and is faced with
an electoral debacle. The
popular anger
against the Congress is sought to be capitalised on by the
BJP. But the cure
offered by Narendra Modi is
worse than the disease. He
champions an
aggressive capitalism which will only worsen the plight of the
people.
Underpinning his “growth” agenda is a vicious majority
communalism which feeds
on the discontent spawned by the corrupt Congress rule.
But the reach of
Modi and the BJP is
limited not only by the latter’s organisational influence but
also by the fact
that in a number of states, there are parties and forces who
are in opposition
to the Congress and contending to win over the people by
offering alternative
political platforms other than that provided by the BJP.
ALTERNATIVE
POLE
The recent efforts
to bring together
the non-Congress secular opposition parties have drawn
attention to this
alternative pole in Indian politics. The
regional parties constitute the bedrock of this emerging
alternative. When
combined with the Left parties, it acquires the shape of an
all-India
alternative.
In the last two Lok
Sabha elections
held in 2004 and 2009, the combined vote percentage polled by
the Congress and
the BJP was below 50 per cent. It was, in fact, 46.7 per cent
in 2004 and 47.4 per
cent in 2009. Since
then, the state
assembly elections in various states have shown the strength
of the regional
parties, which were able to win substantial support and form
governments. These
parties like the AIADMK, the Samajwadi
Party, the Biju Janata Dal and the Janata Dal (United) have
decided to be part
of the non-Congress, non-BJP combination. They also include
other regional
parties like the Janata Dal (Secular), Asom Gana Parishad and
the Jharkhand
Vikas Morcha. It
may be recalled that on
October 30 last year, a Convention was held against
Communalism and for People’s
Unity. This was
attended by fourteen
parties. Except
for the NCP, which is
part of the UPA, all the other parties share a common goal of
fighting both the
BJP and the Congress.
Of these, eleven
parties are
represented in parliament. It is these eleven parties which
have decided to
come together to present an alternative to the Congress and
the BJP in the
forthcoming Lok Sabha elections. They may be joined by some
other parties who
are today not in parliament.
VIRULENT BJP
REACTION
The announcement
that these parties
are coming together to constitute what is called by the media
as the “third
front” has alarmed the BJP. There has been a spate of
statements and speeches
by the BJP leaders attacking the third
front as “illusory”, “a failed experiment” and “unacceptable
to the people”.
Narendra Modi has attacked the third front as “third grade”.
The reason for such
a virulent reaction
from the BJP is evident – as long as the electoral battle was
framed in terms
of “Congress versus BJP” and “Modi versus Rahul”, the BJP was
riding high on
the expectations that all the anti-Congress discontent of the
people could be
harvested by it. But with the emergence of an electoral
alternative to the
Congress and the BJP, the whole equation has been upset and
the BJP’s hollow
claims are being exposed.
In contrast to the
BJP’s projection
of an authoritarian leader based on majority communalism, the
non-Congress
secular opposition combination is based on a totally different
paradigm. The
Left and the regional parties are strong
votaries of the federal principle. This
will be reflected in the coming together of parties, whose
separate identities
and autonomy, will be respected. This will also enable the
Left parties to
utilise the election campaign to propagate the alternative
policies which are a
counter to the neo-liberal policies.
JOINT
DECLARATION
The eleven parties
have decided to
hold a meeting after the current parliament session where they
will announce
the formation of this alternative. There will be a declaration
which will set
out the basic framework, the principles and the direction of
this alternative.
Given the nature of
the parties that
are getting together, it is not necessary that there should be
an electoral
alliance or seat adjustments between all these parties. Since
many of these
parties are state based, it is not feasible to have seat
adjustments with other
constituent parties in other states. But all these parties can
pool their
strength from their respective states for an all-India
combination. Such a
combination which sets out a framework of political positions
and policies as
against the Congress and the BJP will strengthen the efforts
of the constituent
political parties in the elections in their respective states
and areas. Such a
non-Congress, non-BJP platform is
going to provide an alternative to the people who are fed up
with the Congress
and will also effectively counter the BJP’s claim to be the
alternative.
The emergence of
such an alternative is
going to be the rallying point for all the secular-democratic
forces in the
country who want to see an end to Congress rule and who want
to prevent the
party with a communal ideology coming to power at the Centre.