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India’s empty democracy can’t protect its people

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India’s empty democracy can’t protect its people

By Pankaj Mishra, Bloomberg Jan 18 2013
Politically fragmented, the urban middle class has little to look forward to in the short term

Elections make for responsive and accountable governme*nts, or so goes the truism. But can they also achieve the opposite — that is, encourage complacency, even callousness, among elected representatives?

Last month’s headlines from India and China present a disquieting contrast between elected and unelected governments for anyone committed to democratic politics. In Beijing, China’s new Communist Party general secretary, Xi Jinping, has begun a huge crackdown on corruption, official pomp and ceremony, and “empty talk” — substanceless speeches.

According to the est*imable China-watcher Me*linda Liu, “If the changes take hold, they could have far-reaching implications both at home and abroad. Many Chinese seem heartened, even inspired, by Xi’s down-to-earth style.”

Many Indians, on the other hand, are incensed with their sequestered governing class. Confronted last month with public outrage over the horrific assault on a young woman in New Delhi, it alternated abysmally between paralysis and insensitivity. Having initially failed to respond, prime minister Manmohan Singh muttered some perfunctory expressions of governmental resolve in his characteristically faint tone; then, turning to his handlers while the television cameras were still rolling, he asked, Theek hai? Hindi for “Is that all right?” India’s home minister Sushil Kumar Shinde said he was not obliged to meet student protesters braving the police’s water cannons and truncheons near the Indian parliament in New Delhi. After all, as he put it, “Tomorrow Maoists will come here to demonstrate with weapons.”

Force Demonstrated

In fact, the government responded to the spontaneous protesters as though they were militant insurgents from central India: It flooded Delhi’s streets with armed police and shut down roads and railways, revealing a formidable security apparatus that, many argued, could be put to better use ensuring the safety of ordinary citizens. It wasn’t just the government that acted ham-handedly. Figures from all political parties seemed to vie with one another in their crass responses to an atrocious crime, and to the cultures of violence and cruelty it issued from.

Not surprisingly, India these days brims with a free- floating rage against an obscenely venal and cossetted political class that zealously guards its privileges and perks. Middle-class anger has periodically erupted in recent months, and it even appeared to solidify briefly into mass political movements. First, Baba Ramdev, a yoga practitioner, enlisted tens of thousands to his anti-corruption crusade. He was followed by Anna Hazare, a quasi-Gandhian activist, who managed to attract a motley crowd of industrialists, film stars, students on Facebook and urban professionals.

More recently, one of Hazare’s former lieutenants, an ex- civil servant named Arvind Kejriwal, has run a name-and-shame campaign against some of India’s most powerful politicians and businessmen. Each of these ev*ents, including last mon*th’s protests over the gang rape, has been widely greeted as the harbinger of a poli*tically aw*akened and empowered middle class. The government, however, has calculated otherwise. It unleashed the police on Ramdev, evicting him and his followers from their rally grounds in New Delhi. It was similarly ruthless with Hazare, counting successfully on the inability of the educated and the salaried to sustain mass protests or follow them up with a political programme.

Securing Support

With elections due in 2014, the government is trying to secure its two main sources of support: big-businessmen and the vast majority of poor Indians who vote.

Recent economic policies, which allow greater foreign investment in multibrand retail, have somewhat mollified the corporate class, inspiring its representatives in the news media to again hail the lame-duck prime minister as a reformer. An ambitious plan of cash transfers to the poorest Indians — a definite vote-getter — was also recently inaugurated.

The government’s election strategy seems clear: It desperately wants to be seen as redistributing the spoils of economic growth through greater subsidies, even as it facilitates greater access for India’s networks of crony capitalism. In some respects, the gambit resembles that of Thailand’s populist authoritarian Thaksin Shinawatra, who cannily used his support among the rural poor to cement his status as chief crony capitalist. In India, too, many among the relatively privileged — those, for instance, demanding public hangings and castrations of rapists — are contemptuous of democratic and legal processes and generally indifferent to the routine killings and rapes in Kashmir and the Northeastern states by security forces. With their narrow conception of civil rights, they are always vulnerable to self-proclaimed vendors of instant justice and efficiency.

In fact, middle-class support has helped the rise of authoritarian figures such as Narendra Modi, the chief minister of Gujarat, who was re-elected last month despite accusations he was complicit in hundreds of deaths and rapes during an anti-Muslim pogrom in his state in 2002. Modi now hopes that the growing appeal among middle-class Indians of his apparently successful technocracy will help him unseat Singh’s government in Delhi. Modi may not succeed. Still, his ascension through a devastated moral landscape points to the radical shrinking of political choices in India.

Self-Interested

This lamentable situation, where elected representatives act as yet another aggressively self-interested el*ite, is at least partly to be blamed on the fact that the formal and proceduralist features of democracy — elections — have superseded th*eir substantive aspects: st*rong, accountable and fair-minded institutions and officials. Certainly, the importance of the latter is not lost on China’s unelected rulers. Buffeted by a series of scandals, they know that strong measures against corruption are essential to maintaining the communist regime’s legitimacy and ensuring its survival against a rising tide of discontent. Recent pro*tests, such as the one at Southern Weekend new*sp*aper in Gua*ngdong, test the credibility of Xi and his commitment to reform.

India’s own entrenched political class derives its legitimacy from routine elections and well-timed sops to the poor majority. These chosen people don’t have much incentive to engage with middle-class protesters on the streets of Indian cities and don’t have to think hard before dispelling them with brute force.

Indeed, it is now the turn of metropolitan Indians, after political dissenters in Kashmir, the northeast, and central India, to feel the heavy hand of the state. The discontented urban middle class is a growing demographic. But it is deceptively overrepresented for now by India’s many, perennially hysterical television anchors.

Politically fragmented and unorganised, the urban middle class has little to look forward to in the short term, apart from the periodic rise and fall of ineffectual demagogues such as Hazare and Ramdev. Its electoral insignificance in the world’s largest democracy has been carefully quantified by the people to be chosen in 2014. As the prime minister might put it, Theek to hai na — that’s all right, then!

—Bloomberg

(Pankaj Mishra is the author of “From the Ruins of Empire: The Revolt Against the West and the Remaking of Asia” and a Bloomberg View columnist. )

India
 
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All this Indian 'democracy' is all propaganda. India is ruled by the Nehru-Gandhi family. Why do you think an Italian wife of an Indian politician became the most powerful person in India. India has a controlled opposition, its only for the show to keep the clueless sheep happy. The funniest thing is that the sheep believes everything their regime says and thinks its s real democracy.
 
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All this Indian 'democracy' is all propaganda. India is ruled by the Nehru-Gandhi family. Why do you think an Italian wife of an Indian politician became the most powerful person in India. India has a controlled opposition, its only for the show to keep the clueless sheep happy. The funniest thing is that the sheep believes everything their regime says and thinks its s real democracy.

That's pretty much the case of every country in the world.

Countries depend not on the quality of the government, but the quality of the people.
 
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All this Indian 'democracy' is all propaganda. India is ruled by the Nehru-Gandhi family. Why do you think an Italian wife of an Indian politician became the most powerful person in India. India has a controlled opposition, its only for the show to keep the clueless sheep happy. The funniest thing is that the sheep believes everything their regime says and thinks its s real democracy.
buddy to be very frank India will witness a CIVIL WAR in coming years because Indian Middle Class has for the first time become the biggest economic block in the country and that Middle Class - young and apprehensive- is boiling and demanding better governance. But I don't think that the opposition is controlled given they literally rule several major industrial states . The only hope or individual that can save India from a catastrophe is Mr. Narendra Modi.
 
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India is beyond the stage ..whether we should have democracy or dictatoriship. :laugh:

There are better things to discuss.

There are just too many Indians all over the world, and you can always find an odd one... with one view and another one with an exactly contrary view.

There hasn't been one dictator in more than 6000 year old history, here.

Even the Pakistani and BD dictators were of the most benign kind (compared to elsewhere in the world). Media censorship is unenforceable in Pakistan, even if some one wished.
 
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All this Indian 'democracy' is all propaganda. India is ruled by the Nehru-Gandhi family. Why do you think an Italian wife of an Indian politician became the most powerful person in India. India has a controlled opposition, its only for the show to keep the clueless sheep happy. The funniest thing is that the sheep believes everything their regime says and thinks its s real democracy.
did i hear a mainlander calling others "sheep", thanks for the morning chuckles :tup:
 
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That's pretty much the case of every country in the world.

Countries depend not on the quality of the government, but the quality of the people.

It needs both.

The case in india is NOT "pretty much the case of every country in the world"!

did i hear a mainlander calling others "sheep", thanks for the morning chuckles :tup:

CHEERS FOR indian DEMOCRACY!
 
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In democarcy you wont have this...

tiananmen-square.jpg


Democracy has both positive and negative things.. Unfortunetly in India we have more second one.
 
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And you think you don't!!??

You have the most opaque system know to mankind(barring the erst-while Soviet union)

Your govt does not even tell you, how many of you people it kills in your country(either by firing squads or even court mandated death sentences), every information you are fed is run through govt filters.

With the level of ignorance perpetuated in your country.. you would not even know even millions of your people killed.

Question: How long was it before people of China found out that your chairman Mao had killed 40 million of your people in three short years in his great leap?
 
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lol,If we don't know and how did you know,you came to China to count the number??not likely due to the strict restrictions .so western media just did their fantasy guesswork,and you Indians just eat any crap that the west feeds you cause you are so used to being slaves of the westerners.
 
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It needs both.

The case in india is NOT "pretty much the case of every country in the world"!



cheers for the INDIAN democracy!
When people give up their individual greed for the greater good of the entire nation the govt automatically falls in line so the former is a prerequisite while the latter is a direct consequence of the former !

What about your own CCP btw where the top 100 have more wealth than all the elected leaders(senate+congress) of the US combined, how's that for your flawed system ?
 
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lol,If we don't know and how did you know,you came to China to count the number??not likely due to the strict restrictions .so western media just did their fantasy guesswork,and you Indians just eat any crap that the west feeds you cause you are so used to being slaves of the westerners.

So do you know? So how about giving me number, how many people did you kill in your great leap?Forget about what happened fifty years ago..can you even tell me..how many people did your country executed( judicial execution) just last years?

You and your countrymen wallow in ignorance perpetrated by your govt and any information seeping in seems a western propaganda to you!!
But you forget, Ignorance is not always a bliss.
 
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