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HomeNational Interest3 blunders by Indira, Rajiv, Vajpayee, Advani that changed Indian politics &...

3 blunders by Indira, Rajiv, Vajpayee, Advani that changed Indian politics & here’s the worst

Indira Gandhi targeting RSS during Emergency & legitimising it, Rajiv giving up mandate in 1989, and Vajpayee, Advani advancing general elections – these errors changed the course of India’s politics.

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In his replies on the debate on motion of thanks on the President’s address in both Houses of Parliament, Prime Minister Narendra Modi took us back seven decades to count what he sees as the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty’s errors across our independent history.

This gives us the cue for another question: what is the biggest, the most consequential political blunder made by any party or leader in independent India? It is challenging to name just one, so we would list three. We are also confining our search to the past 50 years.

As we go along, I will also put them in my order of significance or consequentiality. We need to clarify, however, how we define such a blunder.

First, it has to be purely related to our politics. Any policy errors, economic, foreign and social, are excluded. This is confined to pure politics.

Second, the morality or propriety is no criterion to judge what was worse or the worst.

And third, a big qualification to be really bad and feature among the three, and then top this sad list — a blunder must have consequences that altered the course of politics for decades. The longer the impact is felt, the worse the error.

At which point, I shall name my choice of the three worst. I am only listing them chronologically yet:

• Indira Gandhi targeting the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) in the Emergency and jailing thousands of its workers, mostly anonymous people. This is distinct from the Jana Sangh leaders she jailed.

• Rajiv Gandhi deciding to sit out and not stake claim to form a government despite winning 197 seats in the Lok Sabha in 1989. The mandate was against him and he’d respect it, he said. Never mind his was the largest party by far.

• In 2004, Atal Bihari Vajpayee and LK Advani advancing the general elections by nearly six months, buoyed by their sweep in Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Chhattisgarh.


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The first question you are likely to ask me might be: why aren’t you counting the imposition of the Emergency among the biggest political blunders? Why just the targeting and jailing of the RSS cadres? The answer is simple. Mrs Gandhi got away with the Emergency; her 1977 defeat was a mere rap on the knuckles. In under three years, she was back in power with a huge majority. If in the 46 years after the Emergency, her party was in power for 25 years, it can only mean that the people forgave her for it.

It was her somewhat targeting of the RSS that endured. First, it legitimised the RSS as a political force, elevating it to be her party’s main ideological adversary. Until then, her party’s strength was it never needed to fight one ideology.

It was her own party’s conservatives, some right of centre, Swatantra Party’s libertarian capitalism, and streams of the political Left. But it was never the Congress ideology versus another. She brought this upon her party. Mass arrests of mostly unknown and relatively common folk of the RSS brought it wide respect and some awe. Socialist Jayaprakash Narayan also chose them as his frontline soldiers. In the course of time, the Jana Sangh was reborn as the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), with the only ideological counter to the Congress as it weakened in the following decades. If she hadn’t targeted the RSS, Modi wouldn’t be sitting pretty with his second majority and looking at third.


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The 1989 poll reduced Rajiv Gandhi’s Congress to 197 from 414 of 1984-85. The next largest party, Janata Dal, of which VP Singh was the biggest leader and the obvious choice for prime minister, had only 143 seats. The Congress staying out enabled an unlikely alliance of the sharpest ideological enemies, the BJP and the Left, to install VP Singh with outside support.

Rajiv Gandhi had obviously thought that such a contradiction will be short-lived and he will be back in a fresh election. He miscalculated on several things.

The biggest was not understanding the risk of opening the door for L.K. Advani to package the BJP as a national alternative to the Congress. Advani’s party soon hit three figures and, with the Congress declining, was able to shed its untouchability for enough regional parties to form a coalition in 1998. The key to ridding itself of this chronic untouchability was the acceptance of alliance with the BJP by its ideological opposites, the Mandal parties and the Left. This was the 1989 gift from Rajiv.

His party might have got power for 15 years subsequently, but continued to weaken. This one miscalculation ended the Congress epoch in Indian politics and in 2014, began the BJP’s.

Think about it. The Congress gave up power with 197 MPs while all coalitions for the next 20 years (1996, 1998, 1999, 2004) were led by a party with fewer. The number was crossed by the Congress itself in 2009, and only marginally (206 seats). We are only talking of coalitions, excluding the Congress’s minority government under Narasimha Rao, 1991-96. Rajiv’s inability to see the inevitability of the coalitions, and ceding power lazily to his most vicious adversaries changed the course of Indian politics.


Also Read: Congress just blew a Ram-given opportunity. It chose chronic confusion over national mood


By January 2004, the BJP leadership was on a high, having swept the three Hindi heartland states. What happened here, they presumed, was going to happen in the rest of their catchment as well. Their think tank, led by Pramod Mahajan, and the usual hangers-on around Advani concluded it was time to advance elections and ride the tide. The only one sceptic, Vajpayee, was outnumbered.

There was also a barely concealed motive driving the Advani group: that Vajpayee’s health won’t last five years, giving Advani a smooth succession. For three quarters, India had averaged eight per cent growth. This was reason enough to launch the India Shining campaign.

In that heady mood, the BJP forgot to do the one thing which had brought them power: keeping their coalition allies together. The result was a spectacular loss of power, with the BJP reduced to 138, 7 below the Congress. For some key regional parties and likely coalition allies, old untouchability was back after Gujarat riots.

Not only did this bring the Congress to power for a decade, it also ended the careers of Advani and all his peers. The intervening period gave Narendra Modi the time to prepare and rise.

Now come the rankings. I would put Rajiv Gandhi’s at the top as its impact on India’s future politics has been the greatest. The reason I’d rank it ahead of his mother’s legitimisation of the RSS is simply because she had been able to still keep it marginalised until 1984 and even after her death, Rajiv reduced the BJP to just two seats in December 1984.

If he hadn’t given up power so easily in 1989, politics of the subsequent decades would have played out very differently. To that extent, he compounded his mother’s blunder. She gave the RSS a national political profile and respect. Advani’s blunder lies essentially in the fact that it destroyed his own ambition. Of course, it paved the road for Modi, who just thanked him with the Bharat Ratna.


Also Read: Why 5 political upsets in India, from 1967 to 2014, hold lessons for struggling INDIA alliance


 

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4 COMMENTS

  1. Thanks Shekhar Ji for such a nice article. I am an Associate Professor in Economics at the University of Leicester , UK.

    If I may please, I would differ with you a bit on the 1989 analysis. The President did call RG to form the government first, but at that point RG had no other option but to decline. How would he get the additional numbers required? Congress dod not have any major pre poll alliance. At that scenario, even the leftwould have not supported the government. However, I do think RG should have formed the government after the fall of the VP government. With the CS faction out, with 197 he could have made CS the deputy PM and offered a few more important cabinet posts. Instead RG chose to repeat the Charan Singh type tale. Incidentally in a recent researcg paper we have shown by careful econometric analysis that this act did cost RG electorally in 1991.

  2. Don’t see the connection between the so-called major blunders. The analysis is too hypothetical. It simply says had Rajiv Gandhi not sat out in 1989 politics of subsequent period would have played out differently. How? Rajiv’s government would not have lasted. He might have still felled by LTTE bullets.

  3. Since the prism is political, sending the IPKF to Sri Lanka can be excluded. However, seeking to nullify the Shah Bano verdict and also opening the locks to the Babri Masjid was a mistake. For Mrs. Gandhi, playing footsie in Punjab, leading ultimately to Operation Blue Star.

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