A. Surya Prakash
The declining image of the United Progressive Alliance government in
the context of mounting corruption charges, signs of non-governance and
dramatic shifts in political allegiances have all added up to render the
United Progressive Alliance Government headed by Mr. Manmohan Singh
vulnerable and shaky at the resumption of the Budget Session of
Parliament after a three-week recess.
In this milieu, the most worrying aspect is the growing backlog of
legislation awaiting parliamentary clearance. Around 40 bills are
pending consideration and passage in the two Houses of Parliament and
another two dozen new bills are ready for introduction. Among the
pending bills are the controversial Lokpal and Lokayuktas Bill, 2011,
the Judicial Standards and Accountability Bill, 2010, the Whistle
Blowers Protection Bill, 2011, the Nuclear Safety Regulatory Authority
Bill 2011, the Education Tribunals Bill, 2010, The Central Educational
Institutions (Reservation in Admission) Amendment Bill, 2010 and The
Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education (Amendment) Bill.
Although many important legislative measures are awaiting
parliamentary approval, the ruling coalition is woefully short on
confidence because of the poor showing of the Congress Party in the
recent assembly elections in five states and the increasingly fractious
nature of the coalition. In this atmosphere of uncertainty, the
government should consider itself lucky if it can see through the
budgetary process without a hitch. Although dozens of bills are pending
parliamentary approval, law-making may become the biggest casualty in
the current session and in the coming sessions of the present Lok Sabha,
given the precarious numbers and the UPA’s woefully inadequate floor
management. The Finance Minister Mr. Pranab Mukherjee will have to
deploy all his PR skills to garner enough support in parliament to push
through legislation critical to the continuance of the economic reform
process. Among them are The Pension Fund Regulatory and Development
Authority Bill, 2011, The Insurance (Amendment) Bill and The Banking
Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2011. He has already extracted an assurance from
the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) that it will support the pension bill,
but this is small comfort for a government that is under attack from all
sides.
As it turned out, the government was on tenterhooks even in the first
part of the Budget Session from March 12 to 30, before the two Houses
went into recess. During that phase, the government faced considerable
embarrassment over the Railway Budget when Ms. Mamata Banerjee protested
against the fare hike and forced the resignation of Mr. Dinesh Trivedi
and the appointment of another MP from the Trinamul Congress as the
Railway Minister. Although the Railway Budget had the approval of the
Prime Minister and the entire cabinet, Dr. Manmohan Singh had to swallow
his pride, sack Mr. Trivedi as per the dictates of Ms. Banerjee and
roll back the marginal fare hikes announced by the Railway Minister in
his budget speech. But all this happened before the state assembly
election results came in on April 6. The humiliating performance of the
Congress Party in Uttar Pradesh and Goa and its defeat in Punjab has
rendered it much weaker.
Thus, when Parliament resumed last week, a weaker Congress Party had
to face fresh threats and challenges from its coalition partners. Ms.
Banerjee has already taken two initiatives which should be cause for
worry for the UPA. The first of these is her willingness to enter into
consultations with the Samajwadi Party in order to find a suitable
candidate for the office of President. The Samajwadi Party has made it
known that the two parties are thinking of Dr. Abdul Kalam for the
office once again. This way the Trinamul Congress, which is inside the
UPA and the Samajwadi Party, which is offering support from outside,
have pre-empted the Congress and taken an initiative. Also joining them
to give the Congress Party some anxious moments is Mr. Sharad Pawar,
leader of the Nationalist Congress Party, who has been making some vague
observations about the qualifications expected of the next President.
Though the election of President is due in July, the politics
surrounding this election is already begun and for the moment it has
unsettled the Congress Party. As if this is not enough, Ms. Banerjee has
also announced a 15-day deadline for a central “package” for West
Bengal, failing which she may even threaten to unsettle the coalition.
Given the precarious strength of the ruling coalition in the Lok
Sabha and the whimsical ways of some of its constituents, the UPA will
have to go out of the way to appease the opposition in order to have its
way in Parliament. The position of the ruling coalition in the Rajya
Sabha is even more precarious. The Congress has 70 MPs in the 245-member
House and the UPA is at least a dozen short of a majority. It can get
bills passed in that House only if it reaches an honourable
understanding with the opposition parties. Following the moves made by
the Samajwadi Party and the Trinamul Congress vis-à-vis the election of
President, there is even talk that the Congress Party may do the
unthinkable - sound the BJP on a possible arrangement regarding election
of President and Vice-President in July and August this year, is order
to deal with its recalcitrant allies.
The government will also come under severe attack during the session
on two counts. The first is the issue of establishing the National
Counter Terrorism Centre (NCTC). The union government unilaterally
decided to set up the centre and arm it with powers of search and
seizure all over the country. Several state governments starting with
Odisha, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu and even West Bengal cried foul and said it
violated the spirit of federalism. Under the Constitution, police and
maintenance of law and order is the prerogative of the state governments
and this is zealously guarded by the states. The states complain that
the Union Home Ministry is trying to usurp some of these powers in the
garb of fighting terrorism. The Centre’s stand is that the powers of the
states have not been compromised. However, following widespread
protests from states including those run by UPA constituents, the Centre
had to beat a hasty retreat. A special meeting of chief Ministers has
now been called in the first week of May to resolve this issue. The
other issue on which the union government will be pilloried by all and
sundry is the Lokpal and Lokayukta Bill. Though the bill was passed by
the Lok Sabha, it ran into rough weather in the Rajya Sabha. If the
government wishes to redeem itself in the eyes of the people who want
firm anti-corruption measures, it will have to convince its allies and
other parties and get the bill passed in the Upper House. Otherwise,
this will become yet another black mark as far as the UPA is concerned.
Finally, as if all this is not enough, things have begun to look
gloomy on the economic front. The global ratings agency Standard &
Poor's has revised the outlook on India's long term sovereign rating to
'negative' from 'stable'. The decline in the country’s growth figures,
the high fiscal deficit, the slow down on the economic reforms front and
the country’s growing debt burden are said to be reasons for the
downgrade that could impact foreign direct investment and the general
global view of India’s economic strength. While one section of the
government is keeping up a brave front – like Mr. C. Rangarajan,
Chairman, Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council – that Standard and
Poor’s will soon reverse and even “upgrade” India’s long term credit
outlook, there are others who are less optimistic.
The government’s Chief Economic Advisor, for example, has virtually
spilled the beans by talking about the difficulties in continuing
economic reforms in the present political environment. Although he has
sought to repair the damage done by initial reports about his speech at
an academic institution in the U.S, the word has gone around that the
UPA suffers from policy paralysis. In order to prove critics wrong, Mr.
Pranab Mukherjee will go all out to secure parliamentary approval for
the bills pertaining to pensions, insurance and banking. Further, the
government will have to take a call on some controversial decisions like
partial decontrol of diesel price, review of subsidies and FDI in
retail, which has been put on hold because of opposition from coalition
partners.
By any reckoning, it is clear that the UPA will only wobble along
from now on until a fresh Lok Sabha election is held. Given the signals
from West Bengal and Uttar Pradesh and from constituents like Mr. Sharad
Pawar, this could well happen ahead of May 2014 when it is actually
due. We will have to wait and see.
Author is Senior Fellow at Vivekananda International Foundation
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.