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Tussle Over A Soul

India바카라s Constitution is being scrutinised, its fundamental principles challenged, like never before. These books represent the two dominant, opposing stands.

The Indian Constitution is re-emerging today as a subject of study and an object of scrutiny. There is an emergent sea change in society바카라s understanding of the Constitution바카라s status. At a recent talk that I gave about the Preamble바카라s essential concepts (liberty, equality and dignity), a faculty member in the audience challenged my reverential attitude toward fundamental rights, asking, 바카라What바카라s so sacred about the Constitution?바카라 This person was no leftist revolutionary; she was a Modi supporter.

While macro-economic challenges forced by global capitalism erode the viability of the democratic welfare-state, und­ermining the ideology of the welfare state would be a natural strategy for both global corporations and cash-strapped democratic states. When the architecture of the welfare state is inbuilt into the Constitution itself, undermining the ideology of aspects of the Constitution would be a necessary consequence of the strategy. For the past two decades, democratic governments have already sought to convince their people of the need to balance fundamental rights against perceived threats over 바카라security바카라. The acceptance of state exigency as superior to constitutional basics gets hardened with the triumph of the security paradigm (in avatars like National Security Act, UAPA, sedition, etc) over liberty (freedom of expression, habeus corpus, due process of law), or the normalisation of invasive surveillance (with global corporations and nation-states in connivance) that tramples citizens바카라 privacy. This helps to catalyse atavism about the nature of state power: a return to the attitudes of many millennia back when we regarded it as the natural right of authorities to rule as they will (that is, not in line with contemporary principles of egalitarian justice). And in a certain sense, I think that behind the question that was posed to me on the sacredness of the Constitution was the question, 바카라Why should our executive government be bound by egalitarian justice?바카라

A dizzying spate of new books on the Constitution by top publishers attests to this new environment, probing into the very nature of democratic constitutions and principles. Several studies have recently appeared: Tripurdaman Singh바카라s Sixteen Stormy Days: The Story of the First Amendment to the Constitution of India (Penguin, 2020), Gautam Bhatia바카라s The Transformative Constitution: A Radical Biography in Nine Acts (Harper Collins, 2019), Chintan Chandrachud바카라s The Cases that India Forgot (Juggernaut, 2020), Madav Khosla바카라s India바카라s Founding Moment: The Constitution of a Most Surprising Democracy (Harvard University Press, 2019), and my own Ambedkar바카라s Preamble: A Secret History of the Constitution of India (Penguin, 2020). It is the first two books mentioned that I want to focus on here.

Tripurdaman Singh바카라s book is exceptionally quick-paced, reader-friendly, and well-written, excepting one dissonant chord repeatedly struck throughout the entire length of the book. That dissonant chord, or jarring needle-scratch, is the raging animus against Jawaharlal Nehru, the villain of Singh바카라s story. Singh portrays Nehru as 바카라a dictator바카라, as the 바카라authoritarian바카라 who dismantled and permanently foreclosed liberal democracy in India, and much worse. The entire narrative around the First Amendment to the Constitution is constructed to establish Nehru바카라s brazen, egotistical effort to 바카라have his own way바카라. So graphic is the character assassination of India바카라s first prime minister that the scenes focusing on him evoke the genre of revenge-porn, here enacted for the perverse titillation of the right-leaning libertarian gaze.     

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More dangerously, Singh바카라s book seems to play to the recent efforts to decouple state power from democratic principles of egalitarian justice, by showing how icons earlier revered for championing such principles (especially Nehru), were no different from any other executive seeking to augment their own power at any cost. Such a cynical narrative insidiously supports today바카라s waxing atavism.           

The book does have its merits, to be sure. It elegantly recounts the tumultuous events unfolding in 1950 and early 1951바카라primarily, the challenges government faced in pursuing its foreign policy (especially with Pakistan) and social justice policies of zamindari abolition and land reform, as well as reservation바카라as a result of constant excoriating negative press, and a string of judicial pronouncements against government with regard to freedom of expression, and the rights to private property and to equality. All of this led Nehru and his cabinet to draft the Constitution (First Amendment) Bill, which the beleaguered PM introduced into Parliament on May 12, 1951, pushing it through in the course of some four harrowing weeks바카라Singh does not make clear, precisely, which sixteen days among these are the eponymous stormy ones.

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Also blurred in the book are the different motivations and interests of the several cabinet members who supported Nehru바카라s amendment; obviously, they did not all agree on every aspect바카라Ambedkar바카라s primary motivation, for example, arose from the court바카라s rejection of reservation (meant to undergird substantive equality in a highly inegalitarian society) on the grounds of abstract liberal equality. Singh collapses the varied motivations into a single reduction to being 바카라hungry for a party ticket바카라. Throughout the book, only the intentions of Nehru and his party are subjected to scrutiny and doubt, and most uncharitably so. Meanwhile, all the critiques by The Times of India against Nehru and his government바카라s policies are taken as objective and unmotivated, despite the obvious risk that they themselves might have represented class and caste biases against socially progressive reforms (especially, though not exclusively, about reservation policy). Similarly, the author takes the rulings of the high and apex courts at face value, ignoring the parallel history of their own rival aim to establish and augment the judiciary바카라s sphere of influence in the emerging Republic.

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In stark contrast, Gautam Bhatia바카라s dense but lively book could not be more at odds with that of Singh. Far from ass­uming some libertarian ideal for Indian constitutionalism, Bhatia argues that liberty in the Indian context cannot be conceived (as it was during the 18th century American or French precedents) as a vertical relation between subjugated citizens under an oppressive government. Instead, Bhatia argues that the founders of India바카라s Republic were aware that private, non-state 바카라structures and institutions were often sources of domination and authoritarianism바카라 that had to be tackled constitutionally.

Bhatia바카라s 바카라transformative바카라 reading of the Constitution traces how liberty, equality, and fraternity have evolved substantively towards a regulative ideal of democratic, egalitarian freedom. The ideal remains unrealised, but it serves to motivate citizens, and hopefully to influence government behaviour, looking forward. Thus, unlike for Singh, Bhatia does not believe that Indian liberal democracy was dead on arrival. Rather, the constitutional essentials upon which our Republic was founded rem­ain there ready to be reanimated.

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It follows, then, that the arbitrary authoritarianism of executive power need not be taken as inevitable. Our pre-constitutional past does not have to be our constitutional future.

(Rathore is author of Ambedkar바카라s Preamble: A Secret History of the Constitution of India)

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