Sadguru Sivananda Murty - Indian Elections

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    THE ELECTION OF A GOVERNMENT : THE INDIANMODEL- Sivananda Murty

    We are on the threshold of the general election for the fifteenth Lok

    Sabha along with the elections for A.P.Assembly. The election manifestos in

    a healthy democracy in a civilized country must necessarily be the issues that

    the people have before them. In our country, this does not appear to be the

    case. The manifesto of any political party virtually promises of utopian

    boons to the suffering people which tantamount to temporary bribes. These

    promises are neither totally fulfilled nor possible to fulfil. Among the elec-

    tion promises we find millions of houses to the poor, jobs to everyone, old

    age pensions to every one and two rupees for a kilo of rice and so on. If, at

    least, three sucessive governments could fulfill these promises the country

    would have been different from what it is. Neither the countrywide slums

    holding a one third of the population have been cleared or replaced by apart-

    ments nor the millions of poor people got any pension. The stink of the

    slums increases steadily and provides material for making shameful but

    prize-winning movies to clever business men. The hospitals and schools run

    by the government being sub-standard, create excellent business opportuni-

    ties to commercial enterprise in expensive hospitals and expensive education.These institutions are of course unapproachable even to the lower middle

    class and the poor. Corruption in the country grows by leaps and bounds

    which results in creating more black money day by day. Black money in turn

    raises the cost of a dwelling, unapproachable to the wage-earning middle

    class. The black money rules the economy of the country unlike in any other

    country in the world. Selling or buying any property in real money transac-

    tion escapes all record. Thus, the unaffording lower middle class and the

    poor move farther and farther away from a hope to own a house.

    Moneylenders including banks make brisk busienss by lending moneys to the

    tempted people who can never repay within their earnings. The economy is

    galloping fast in our country to suit only the corrupt blackmoney maker, thus

    widening the gap between the salaried middle class and the money-making

    politician or dubious business men. The poor are nowhere in the picture.

    Such an economy is bound to crash because the poor and the middle

    class have no part to play, have no say, and have no voice to be heard in the

    situation.

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    In fact, the budget of the government is entirely contributed by the

    wage-earning middle class who can not escape any taxation whether as a con-

    sumer or as an income tax payer. And yet, the politician never goes to the

    educated middle class to know their grievances nor suggestions. It appearsthat the politician has only a single minded objective of going to the poor

    masses for votes promising them all sops. The masses consisting of labour,

    organized or otherwise, the self-employed poor who eke out their living as a

    vegetable vendor, petty trader, or rickshaw-puller, porter etc. neither pays any

    tax to the government nor does he know what the politicial process in the

    country is. The promises made to them, in fact, spend the budget without all

    the benefits reaching the poor. Thus, the poor millions listen to the mouth-

    watering promises of the politicians, ever hoping to get a free house, a job, a

    pension, a school, a hospital etc. The billions that are shown as spent are

    from the earnings of the middle class, whether as an employee with recorded

    salaries or a struggling shop-owner. The tax that the latter pays is some times

    equalled by the bribes he pays to the harassing government servants. The

    middle class people are the very substance of the society.

    To sum up the phenomenon, the voiceless tax payer pays for the expen-

    sive schemes ostensibly meant for the benefit of non tax-paying majority pop-

    ulation. One loses and the other does not gain! The benefits go largely to thepoliticians, contractors and the ranks in government. The budgets grow in

    size year by year, election after election. The black-money in the country, it

    is said, has reached a whopping four million crores, not to speak of the unac-

    counted millions in the Swiss banks.

    If this system continues unabated, the country will reach, if it has not

    already reached, to an irreversible failure of democracy which would lead to

    any disstrous consequences, like a violent revolution. There are revolutinaryleftist forces with violence as their means, committed to whipping up the pas-

    sions of the masses calling upon them to revolt against the system of gover-

    nance in place, to destroy the rich and even the culture of the middle class

    called the bourgeois. These forces like the Naxalite, Maoist etc. are drawing

    thusands of youth into their fold and indulging in violent destruction of the

    men and machinery of the government in no small measure. This is a grow-

    ing danger which the politician of any brand pretends to be ignorant about.

    This is a potential danger to democracy ifself, more so due to the corrupt and

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    failing democracy ( Nepal is an example). Political parties or the existing

    Laws in the country have evaded their responsibility in this matter. Neither

    there is a policy, nor an action-plan in the country today even after six decades

    of continued violence.

    Election time is a mile stone in the political history of a country. When

    a government is formed, a vote by a citizen is inherently meant to be his judg-

    ment on the performance of the government thus far and a considered choice

    of the next government, in our country, this basic meaning of a vote is long

    lost. It is, in bulk a maneuvered extraction in numbers from the uneducated,

    gullible non tax-paying masses which are a numerical majority. This massive

    manipulation goes unabated without being an expression of any choice or

    judgment.

    The visible boom in consumerism need not be considered as progress of

    our economy nor as success of our democracy. In fact, both are in peril. It is

    nothing but diversion of the middle class attention from a responsible citizen-

    ship to a debt trapped attraction towards a glamorous life style.

    It is high time that the educated middle class are separately consulted

    without mixing them with the millions of purchased votes. A process has to be

    evolved wherein the educated, understanding the relevant opinion in the coun-try is heard and allowed to play a role in the making of a government. The

    tax-paying citizen should be treated on a different plane from the bribed mil-

    lions of voters, who can neither understand what is happening to the economy

    of the country, what is defective in the functioning of government, what justice

    is being done to them etc. An educated citizen s vote by quality should count

    for much more than that a poor villager who does not vote with any opinion.

    The educated man as a tax payer can certainly judge what is good for the poor,

    what ought to be done and what ought not to be done. His vote is a vote ofdiscretion. He does not cast his vote for a bottle of liquor and Rs.200/-. These

    purchased votes with no opinion behind are like fake currency. The intrinsic

    value of vote therefore must be accepted as several times more than that of a

    cheaply purchased vote. This is in fact a real election. He can certainly think

    of security of the country and welfare of the poor. Is there a mechanism to

    recognize such a differential value of his vote? In the name a democracy and

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    equality of all citizens, the system of election has benefited the cash-rich can-

    didate to win the election bypassing the judgment of the people. Thus, the

    election is reduced to a farce!

    In countries like France, for a long time all men and women did nothave a right to vote because a few thinking men could decide what was good

    to all. We should, therefore, evolve a system in which there are discreet and

    considered votes in an election. The P.R.Act should be made to be truly rep-

    resenting the educated tax payer If the present system continues inevitably,

    the performance of the government after about two years should be judged

    by a separate opinion-poll from the eligible tax-payers and the educated citi-

    zens. Such a mid-term election should be a statutory judgment binding on

    the government.

    After the maneuvered election there ought to be checks and balances

    on the performance of a governent involving the judgement of the people

    instead of a wholesale mandate to misrule. This aspect of a necessary reform

    should be considered by all including legal experts, honest politicians and

    responsible citizens to save our country from a future disaster.

    I am aware that the issue raised here is seeking a differential treatment

    between voter and a voter which under the Constitution in place is legallyunacceptable but if the Constitution or a Law has not proved to be beneficial

    to the society by an experience of six decades, under the principle of natural

    justice such letter of Law needs to be reconsidered and revised in the interest

    of the people. If such revision can be accompanied by disqualification of

    tainted politician in election and if it can effectively prevent violence

    between constesting political parties, the country can hope for real democra-

    cy with justice for all. It can also include a reform in the matter of reserva-

    tions. Reservation and exclusive encouragement to the down-trodden tobecome more competent for selection would be far more beneficial to them

    rather than reservation of employment. It is high time our country had a re-

    look at our performance in the past six decades and thought of radical

    reform.

    Date: 04-03-2009

    Bheemunipatnam ( Sivananda Murthy)

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