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Lok Sabha 2024: Has INDIA Ignored The Country's Past Coalition Lessons?

India바카라s experience with rainbow coalition governments is bad, which is why the INDIA bloc has to work harder for voter confidence 

From the Archives: VP Singh, along with NT Rama Rao, PK Mahanta and N Karunanidhi in 1989
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Ahead of the 1977 Lok Sabha election, the repression of Emergency rule had helped a wide range of the Congress바카라 opponents, from opposite ideological poles, give up their separate identities and form a unified platform to dethrone Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. They gathered around freedom fighter Jayprakash 바카라JP바카라 Narayan, the tallest living politician of the time, who served as the nucleus of the newly-launched Janata Party. He was the face of a united opposition to Gandhi바카라s authoritarianism.

Prior to the 1989 Lok Sabha election, again a range of opposition parties came together against Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, especially on corruption charges. An opposition alliance formed around dissident Congress leader Vishwanath Pratap Singh, who had launched his own party, Janata Dal, initiating what is often considered the 바카라second Janata experiment.바카라

In 1996, a post-poll coalition of various regional parties wanted the CPI(M)바카라s Jyoti Basu바카라the Bengal chief minister for 19 years straight at that time바카라to take up the premiership and serve as the nucleus. His party did not allow it, though. The Left parties were not formally part of any of these coalitions but extended external support when necessary. 

Ahead of the 2014 Lok Sabha election, an apparently apolitical anti-corruption movement developed against the Congress바카라 Manmohan Singh government with social worker Anna Hazare as the main face. Though centred in Delhi, the movement helped spread anti-Congress sentiments to different parts of the country until the BJP announced Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi바카라already a polarising name바카라as their prime ministerial face. Modi바카라s anti-corruption pitch took off from where Hazare had left it.

Now, the question of the face or anchoring force of the opposition has started ringing louder as the 2024 Lok Sabha election inches forth, with opposition parties of varying ideologies and interests trying to stitch together a common platform of as many anti-BJP forces as possible.

The INDIA bloc바카라the Indian National Developmental Inclusive Alliance­바카라though, is still far away from beginning any seat-sharing talks or presenting any roadmap. For the first time, in any such initiative at the national level, the Left parties are formally a part of it. But the platform itself has yet to take any shape or find a nucleus for others to gather around.

One of the major challenges before the current opposition unity initiative is that the parties that came together in 1977 and 1989 had less competitive interest between themselves than the opposition forces in today바카라s INDIA.

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Lalu Prasad Yadav, Jyoti Basu and VP Singh Photo: Getty Images

Changing Scenario and Equations

Faces and personalities have played an important role in the Indian political system, often more important than party symbols or the colour of flags. When Indira Gandhi fell out with the Congress바카라s old guard in 1969, effecting a split in the organisation, her opponents managed to retain the old Congress electoral symbol of a pair of bullocks carrying a yoke. The Gandhi-led faction had to contest with a new symbol. But it was her face that worked. She returned to power with a massive mandate in 1971.

But the opposition forces in Narendra Modi바카라s India have so far failed to find any face to gather around. In the 2019 Lok Sabha election, the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) appeared weak from the very outset of the campaign, as major regional parties were evidently looking to corner the Congress within a broad opposition network.

The BJP targeted the opposition camp for being leaderless and visionless, mocked them saying the opposition government will have seven prime ministers designated for every day of the week, and the opposition failed to assure the voters of coming anywhere close to offering a stable government.

Post 2019, too, several unsuccessful attempts to build an opposition alliance with the Congress as a lesser force, were initiated by the likes of West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee and Telangana chief minister K Chandrasekar Rao. Finally, Bihar chief minister and Congress ally Nitish Kumar prepared the ground for the Congress to take the initiative.

The INDIA bloc has so far seen warring forces like the Congress and Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal바카라s Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) share a dais, even though Banerjee바카라s Trinamool Congress (TMC)바카라s presence has pushed her arch-rival CPI(M) to be less visible as part of the bloc.

바카라It is after the five state elections that all parties will have an idea of the political trends. Each force바카라s strength will determine their bargaining power and the alignment outcomes바카라

바카라In India, a majority of voters will want to know who would be the next prime minister. To be able to counter the face of a strong ruling leader without any opposition face, the opposition needs to have bold policy decisions and a clear roadmap. As of now, INDIA bloc has none of these,바카라 a Congress veteran says and adds, 바카라But all these will change when we deal the BJP a few blows in the coming state elections.바카라  

His hopes are based on the understanding that in 2019, the Congress was still seen as a declining force, which is why regional parties were keener on grabbing the Congress바카라 space than building a strong alliance. In contrast, the party is currently being seen as a force recovering lost ground바카라 winning the Karnataka and Himachal state elections, among its major achievements.

A TMC Rajya Sabha MP, who too spoke on condition of anonymity, agrees that the five state elections would play a significant role in shaping the opposition platform.

바카라It is after the five state elections that all parties will have an idea of the political trends. Each force바카라s strength will determine their bargaining power and the alignment outcomes,바카라 the parliamentarian said.

Lessons from the Past

What happens to the Congress바카라 hopes remains to be seen but India바카라s past experience with rainbow coalitions does not help INDIA. In 1977, when opposition forces gathered around JP, they even merged parties to form the new Janata Party.

The new party included Gandhian socialists, regional forces, the Congress (O), the right-liberal Swatantra Party, and the right-conservative Bharatiya Jana Sangh (BJS). Left parties shared daises with Janata leaders, including those from BJS backgrounds. They formally contested the election under the Bharatiya Lok Dal (BLD)바카라s name and symbol, as the new party could not get an electoral symbol in such a short time.

Indira Gandhi had repeatedly called the alliance  바카라an ideological hodgepodge바카라 but could not prevent her party바카라s electoral debacle.

Despite managing to topple Gandhi바카라s government 바카라 her party was almost routed from most parts of India, except the south 바카라 various Janata components fell out with each other and the Morarji Desai government fell in just two years. Another Janata faction-led government ruled for five months before a fresh election was called.

JP, who did not contest the 1977 election and had no intention of joining the government, became upset with the workings of his mentees and gradually disassociated himself from its affairs. The BJS was re-launched as the BJP, and the people brought Indira Gandhi back to power.

In 1989, VP Singh바카라s newly-launched Janada Dal led the formation of a five-party alliance called National Front. Other components were regional ruling parties, Telugu Desam, Asom Gana Parishad (AGP), and Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) as well as the Congress (S). The parties had their own areas of influence and therefore little competitive interest between themselves at the regional scale.

바카라The so-called popular 바카라waves바카라 triggered by emotive national issues, which have characterised national elections since 1971, were not apparent this time. There was no clear mandate for a person or a party,바카라 US diplomat Walter K Anderson wrote in 1990.

When both Congress and the National Front fell short of the majority mark, both the Left and the BJP extended their 바카라external support바카라 to Singh.

Anderson noted in his article that the fragmentation of the vote 바카라aroused speculation about the viability of a coalition arrangement in a country accustomed to governing parties with strong majorities-and recently to a ruling party with a weak organisational structure (JD).바카라

Singh바카라s stint lasted only 11 months, which was followed by a seven-month stint of Charan Singh as the prime minister. The Congress was back in 1991.

Similar was the fate of the non-Congress, non-BJP Third Front of regional forces during the 1990s. It lasted only two years from 1996, with two prime ministers.

Many political observers believe the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) managed to get a clear majority in the 1999 Lok Sabha election because Atal Bihari Vajpayee had managed to create the impression of himself as a reliable prime minister during his 13-month stint in 1998-99.

There is also the example of the 2004 election, when the BJP-led NDA had the face of Vajpayee but the Congress went to the election without a prime ministerial face. Referring to Congress president Sonia Gandhi바카라s Italian roots, the BJP was asking if India was ready for a 바카라foreigner바카라 prime minister. The Congress scripted a return to power nevertheless, to run the country for another 10 years.

Since 1999, India has had three successive, stable coalition governments serving their full terms. In each, the anchoring party had more than one-quarter of the total Lok Sabha seats 바카라BJP 182 in 1999, and the Congress 145 and 206 in 2004 and 2009, respectively. But in 2014 and 2019, the highest strength of an opposition party has been the Congress바카라 52 in 2019.

Poor Display?

An ideal ground for electorally launching the INDIA bloc could have been the five state elections in November. But seat-sharing talks failed. In Madhya Pradesh, where the Congress is the main contender to replace the BJP바카라s Shivraj Singh Chauhan government, INDIA bloc members Samajwadi Party (SP), AAP and even Nitish Kumar바카라s JD(U) fielded their own candidates in 70, 43 and 10 seats, respectively. The AAP is contesting separately in Rajasthan and Chhattisgarh as well.

Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav, former Uttar Pradesh chief minister, did not hide his frustration at being snubbed by the Congress in its demand for Madhya Pradesh seats. The Congress바카라 attitude has taught him a lesson, he said.

바카라Congress has not been able to play the role of the nucleus. Other parties in the INDIA bloc would like the Congress to be more accommodative, which it has not been as of now, especially if we consider the situation in Madhya Pradesh,바카라 says Mumbai-based journalist Jyoti Punwani. She pointed out that the Congress was being difficult with respect to Delhi and Punjab and this big brotherly attitude would harm the prospects of a credible alliance. 바카라For INDIA to take shape, the Congress has to be more democratic in its attitude towards INDIA partners,바카라 she says.

An ideal ground for electorally launching the INDIA bloc could have been the five state elections in November. But seat-sharing talks failed.

According to columnist Udayan Bandyopadhyay, who teaches political science at Bangabasi College in Kolkata, INDIA members have missed a chance to display their unity in the five state elections and their prospects do not appear bright. 바카라It was crucial for the INDIA bloc바카라s credibility that the Congress and AAP came to a seat-sharing understanding. Now busy tearing into each other, how would they convince people about their support for each other a few months later?바카라 Bandyopadhyay asks. He thinks the failure of a Congress-Samajwadi Party understanding in Madhya Pradesh is likely to have a bearing on the two parties바카라 seat adjustment prospects for the Lok Sabha election in Uttar Pradesh, India바카라s largest state with 80 seats, as well.

바카라The Union government has sent the central agencies after leaders of every opposition party, including the TMC. The Congress and the Left parties are opposing such political use of central agencies. But in West Bengal, the Left and the Congress leaders are busy targeting the TMC instead of targeting the BJP for its abuse of government agencies,바카라 Bandyopadhyay points out.

In INDIA, the TMC has sheer political competition with the Left and the Congress in West Bengal, the Left has it with the Congress in Kerala, the AAP has it with the Congress in Delhi, Punjab, Rajasthan, Gujarat and Chhattisgarh, the TMC has it with the Congress in Meghalaya, the SP has it with the Congress in Uttar Pradesh and so on.

Whether the alleged abuse of central agencies to harass the opposition leaders can bring these parties with conflicting interests closer remains to be seen.

(This appeared in the print as 'Coalition Lessons Ignored?')

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