THE GIST of Editorial for UPSC Exams : 26 JUNE 2019 (The future of parliamentary democracy (The Hindu))
The future of parliamentary democracy (The Hindu)
Mains Paper 2: Polity
Prelims level : Parliamentary democracy
Mains level : Describe the role of parliamentary democracy in Indian politics
Context
- Weeks after the nation gave a decisive mandate to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA), political analysts are yet to come up with plausible reasons for what happened.
- No one had forecast this kind of majority, though there are many who now claim they saw it coming.
The magnitude of victory
- First and foremost, in 2019 the NDA eclipsed its performance of 2014.
- It secured 352 seats, while the Congress-led alliance came next with 91 seats.
- The BJP tally of seats was 303 while the Congress secured 52. Regional parties such as the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, All India Trinamool Congress, YSR Congress Party, Shiv Sena, Janata Dal (United), Biju Janata Dal and Bahujan Samaj Party each secured 10-23 seats, demonstrating the overwhelming nature of the Modi victory.
- In 224 of the 303 seats it won, the BJP vote share exceeded 50%, compared to 136 in 2014.
- The BJP retained over 81% of the seats it had won previously.
Shifting nature of politics
- Mundane statistics still do not explain the scale of victory.
- Various theories have been floated, viz. that India was entering a new epoch in which Mandir-Mandal politics had no place; caste and subaltern politics had receded into the background; and we are seeing a new India.
- These are mere facile arguments being put forward to explain an unprecedented victory which no one saw coming.
- Certain strategists meanwhile have speculated that the “victory” could be attributed to: the adoption of a new revolutionary approach to ‘data-driven’ communications; the utilisation of ‘influence politics’; and the employment of new ‘social media tactics’, which had the potential to change the behaviour of the electorate.
- This again makes for good copy, but the truth of what led to such a massive victory for the BJP still eludes everyone.
Without issues
- The Opposition concentrated its attack on the weakening economy, but it is conventional wisdom that the true state of the economy or the lack of jobs is often irrelevant to voters when other matters of greater significance intrude.
- The Prime Minister, knowingly or unknowingly, never entered into a debate on the economic aspects, thus denying the Opposition a platform.
- The Opposition also had little occasion to bring up the Mandir issue, since the BJP never projected it as a major election card this time
- Mandal politics has long since lost its edge, as the benefits to be derived from it have since become part and parcel of the political philosophy of every party in the country.
- The Opposition, hence, had little ammunition to deploy against the ruling dispensation.
This again is more illusory than real
- This election was one of a kind, in which issues did not matter.
- This may seem like an ‘anomaly’, but in much the same manner as ‘anomalies’ during revolutions in science led to new paradigms, the Opposition failed to recognise the change that had taken place this time.
- This, together with the unparalleled polarisation and a Hindu consolidation, meant that the Opposition had probably lost the election even before the majority of the electorate had got to the polling booths.
What does the 2019 election victory of Prime Minister Modi presage for parliamentary democracy?
- Parliamentary democracy is the cornerstone of the edifice sanctified by the Constitution. If any part of the edifice, and especially its cornerstone, is affected or diminished, it could spell damage to what we have come to believe since 1950.
- The question is not rhetorical, but requires a well-considered answer.
- When any individual, the Prime Minister included, eclipses his party that is notionally responsible for victory in a parliamentary election, then we are entering uncharted waters, where current rules do not apply.
- Across the world, there is a wave today in favour of tall and powerful leaders from Donald Trump to Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping but they do not head parliamentary democracies.
- In a parliamentary democracy, the Prime Minister is clearly the first among equals, but is not larger or bigger than the party.
Presidential-style vote
- In 2014, Mr. Modi had crested the wave of disillusionment against the then ruling dispensation, which had been in office for a decade.
- This was not, however, the case in 2019, where incumbency and the inability to deal with a variety of issues had led to a degree of disillusionment with the BJP.
- Yet, Mr. Modi proved invincible, and the party benefited from it.
- Few among the electorate possibly voted for the BJP; they voted for Mr. Modi and what Mr. Modi stood for. The reality is that the electorate voted as if it were a presidential election to elect Mr. Modi.
Conclusion
- If the current trend is maintained, it could well mean the end of parliamentary democracy.
- Now that the elections are over, it might be worthwhile to look dispassionately at the growing trend of favouring ‘maximum leaders’ to the detriment of the parties they lead, and to the policies and practices the latter espouse.
- This does carry risks for the future of parliamentary democracy.
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Prelims Questions:
Q.1) With reference to the Lunar Evacuation System Assembly (LESA),
consider the following statements:
1. It is developed by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA).
2. It is a pyramid-like structure whose purpose is to rescue an astronaut should
he or she suffer an injury on the lunar surface.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
A. 1 only
B. 2 only
C. Both
D. None