Delhi LG: ‘Govt Won’t Be Run From Jail’, AAP Maintains Kejriwal Won’t Resign

The ruling Aam Aadmi Party has said no constitutional provision prevents Kejriwal from carrying out his duties while being in the Enforcement Directorate’s custody.

New Delhi: Four days after Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal passed his first order from prison, Lieutenant-Governor V.K. Saxena has said that the government “won’t be run from jail”. 

Saxena was addressing a public event on Wednesday (March 27) when he made the remark. 

However, the ruling Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) has said no constitutional provision prevents Kejriwal from carrying out his duties while being in the Enforcement Directorate’s (ED) custody.

Kejriwal was arrested on March 21 – hours after the Election Commission published electoral bonds data on its website – in connection with the liquor policy case. The ED has alleged that Kejriwal accepted kickbacks from certain liquor vendors in return for favours under the now-scrapped excise policy for 2021-22.

In response to the orders issued by Kejriwal from jail premises, Delhi BJP president Virendra Sachdeva filed a complaint with Police Commissioner Sanjay Arora on Wednesday.

Also read: Ek Dhakka Aur Do: What the BJP Under Modi and Shah Is Doing to Indian Democracy

In two separate orders, Kejriwal had asked Delhi Ministers to deal with the shortage of medicines at Delhi government hospitals and with water supply-related problems in parts of the capital, the Hindu report said.

While Sachdeva demanded an investigation into the “illegal” orders, AAP maintained that Kejriwal won’t resign from his post.

BJP ‘conspiring’ to impose president’s rule

Meanwhile, Delhi finance minister and AAP leader Atishi accused the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) of conspiring to impose president’s rule in Delhi.

Citing the Representation of People Act, 1951, she said the chief minister can only be stopped from issuing orders if they are no longer a member of the Assembly following conviction in a case in which the duration of sentence is two years or above, the Hindu reported.

“This does not apply to a person who is only an accused and has not been adjudged as guilty by a court of law,” she said, adding that the mere arrest of the chief minister can’t be grounds for imposition of President’s Rule.

“It is clearly a political conspiracy on the part of the BJP. First, the chief minister was arrested in a fake case, and then they [BJP] demanded his resignation for disrespecting the people’s mandate. And if he doesn’t resign, they will threaten to impose president’s rule,” she said.

According to the Hindu, Atishi said that president’s rule can only be imposed if the ruling party loses the majority in the Assembly. “The apex court has repeatedly said that the president’s rule can be imposed only if there is no other choice left for the governance of a state,” she added.

BJP to Try Westminster Concept of ‘Shadow Cabinet’ on AAP Govt in Delhi

The party has asked its Delhi legislators for suggestions on which department or minister they would like to shadow.

New Delhi: The Delhi unit of Bharatiya Janata Party is contemplating a ‘shadow cabinet’, which is a feature of the Westminster system of governance, to track and monitor the functioning of all ministers of the Arvind Kejriwal-led Aam Aadmi Party government in Delhi.

The party unit, which got a new president in Adesh Gupta in June this year, is in the process of announcing the names of new office-bearers for various posts. A week ago, it appointed new presidents to all the 14 district units.

Now the party has decided to form a shadow cabinet to utilise the services of its MLAs. Legislators have been asked for their opinions on the subject. They have also been asked to disclose which departments or ministers they would like to monitor.

The proposal is expected to be taken up for discussion after two weeks by senior Delhi BJP leaders, including state unit president Gupta and national vice-president and in-charge of the Delhi unit, Shyam Jaju.

‘A step towards decentralisation of work’

Leader of Opposition in Delhi Assembly and BJP MLA Ramvir Singh Bidhuri said, “It was felt that this would give all the MLAs an important task to perform. They would be encouraged to make their own enquiries, engage with people and officials, identify issues related to people and the problems being faced by them.”

Also read: ‘Problem With CAA Won’t Go Away Because One Activist Joins BJP,’ Say Shaheen Bagh Women

He added that the BJP believes that “decentralisation of work is very important” for bringing the best out of legislators. “This initiative will be a kind of responsibility that would be entrusted to legislators and then we will see how they perform.”

Also, since BJP has eight MLAs in Delhi, apart from the Leader of the Opposition, that would leave seven of them to track the various departments under the seven ministers in the Delhi Cabinet.

The BJP wants to identify areas of weakness in the ruling government. Not only had AAP won the 2015 Delhi Assembly elections handsomely by winning a record 67 of the 70 seats, it had almost repeated its performance in the polls earlier this year, by bagging 62 seats.

With Congress relegated to a distant third position, having witnessed a sharp drop in its vote share, BJP clearly feels it needs to identify faults in the working of the AAP government in order to regain its hold in Delhi.

Also read: The Ideological Strategy Behind the Delhi Riots

Concept emerged from Westminster system of governance

The concept of ‘shadow cabinet’ comes from the Westminster system followed in the United Kingdom, several Commonwealth states and other countries.

The UK parliament site describes a shadow cabinet as a “team of senior spokespeople chosen by the Leader of the Opposition to mirror the Cabinet in Government. Each member of the shadow cabinet is appointed to lead on a specific policy area for their party and to question and challenge their counterpart in the Cabinet.”

Also read: Is the BJP Deriving Political Mileage Out of the Sushant Singh Rajput Case?

In British parliamentary practice, the opposition shadow cabinet comprises senior members who are each given a minister to shadow and they study their working, develop alternative policies and hold them to account for their actions and responses.

Similarly, in Australia, the parliament actually lists the names of various Opposition leaders, including the Deputy Leader of the Opposition, who are given the role of a ‘shadow minister’ and are allotted respective portfolios. For example at the moment, the Deputy Leader of Opposition Richard Marles is the shadow minister for Defence there.

The practice of having Shadow Ministers is also followed in several other countries, including New Zealand, France, South Africa and Canada.

BJP-Shiv Sena tried it in Maharashtra in 2005

In India, BJP had also experimented with this concept in 2005, and formed a shadow cabinet with the Shiv Sena in Maharashtra to keep a close eye on the functioning of the then Vilasrao Deshmukh-led Congress-NCP government in the state.

The Congress too tried its hand at this concept in Madhya Pradesh in 2015. It formed a shadow cabinet to counter the BJP government led by Shivraj Singh Chouhan, who was in his third term as chief minister then.

Apart from political parties, civil society groups and non-governmental organisations too have formed shadow cabinets in the past. While an NGO, Gen Next, had done one such experiment in Goa in 2015, some civil society members announced a similar initiative in Kerala in April 2018 to analyse the functioning of the Pinarayi Vijayan-led Left Democratic Front government in the state.

The Neuroscience Behind Kejriwal’s Victory

Kejriwal has managed to condition the psyche of Delhi voters to associate water, electricity, transportation, school and healthcare with AAP.

Arvind Kejriwal’s victory is currently being viewed from the perspective of a development centred narrative coupled with a platitude of freebies offered by the Aam Admi Party (AAP). However, if one analyses past election results, voters have rejected pro-development governments on a number of occasions.

The governments of Narasimha Rao, as well as Vajpayee, were decisively rejected by the voters, despite their strong development-centric approaches. Freebies have been also rejected by voters – rejection of Congress’ Nyay scheme during the 2019 elections is a glaring example. What then makes Kejriwal so special that both factors – which have pushed many governments into oblivion – worked in favour of AAP?

The answer to these questions lies in Neuroscience. We have all read about Pavlov’s work on conditioned reflexes based on experiments, where an animal was given food and a bell was rung. After a while, the animal started feeling hungry and began to salivate when the bell was rung. This is also called classical conditioning where, a conditioned stimulus e.g. the sound of a bell, is paired with unconditioned stimulus e.g. food which evokes salivation which is an unconditioned response requiring no training.

After the pairing is repeated, the animal demonstrates a conditioned (or doctored) response to the conditioned stimulus or the external agent. The key observation is that repeated enforcement of a given pattern at the mental level, can actuate specific action patterns. This is exactly, what Kejriwal has done.

Also read: AAP: Soft Hindutva or a Bulwark Without Illusions?

He did not offer a one-time waiver of loans to people, as many other governments have done, as people are not only likely to forget it with time but their aspirations also rise, leading to an increase in anti-incumbency. Kejriwal partially waived off electricity and water bills, which impacted the public periodically while entrenching his image as a family caretaker.

Kejriwal identified two other areas, from which a conditioned response could be evoked within a definite timeframe – education and health. He knew that improving the quality of education in government schools was extremely difficult to achieve in the short run, so he focused mainly on building classrooms in schools. Most people tend to cross a site near a school on a daily basis.

The emergence of huge buildings can convince people into believing that the quality of education is changing for the better. It affects parents, wards and the general public on a daily basis. Kejriwal also directed the remaining efforts towards the health sector. He set up Mohalla clinics, which may not offer quality health services, but the thought of someone in one’s neighbourhood, to attend to them during distress can be a great mental stimulus for the voters.

Voters queue at a polling booth for the New Delhi assembly election in the Indian capital on February 8, 2020. Photo: Reuters

Kejriwal has always believed in making immediate and short term impact with minimal efforts. His odd-even scheme to control rising air pollution in the city was mostly hype and little substance, but people did talk about it while enhancing his pro-development image. His more recent efforts towards making bus transportation free for women also fall along this direction.

The voters of Delhi have failed to realise that Kejriwal’s investment in infrastructure-based projects, something which was radically done by the Sheila Dikshit government, has drastically fallen behind. For example, capital expenditure, which is associated with investments in infrastructure, has fallen to 0.54% of GSDP in 2018-19 from 1.16% in 2011-12. Declining tax revenues, which have dropped from 5.49% of GSDP in 2015-16 to 4.93% in 2018-19, are a cause of concern. But then, people tend to get swayed by actions having an immediate impact and this is one of the key pitfalls of democratic process.

Also read: AAP Has Successfully Forged a Model for Regional Forces to Emulate

The BJP government had sufficient time towards initiating a set of efforts directed towards creating a specific pro-development image and associated cognitive states in Delhi. For example, they could have set up dozens of central universities, hospitals and schools for residents, which could have had a cascading effect on people’s psyche.

Instead, the BJP chose to focus on things, which had absolutely very little cognitive value. Sentiment driven elements can also have strong cognitive values, but only when other narratives are absent. A typical middle-class family in Delhi cares little about Article 370, CAA and the Ram Temple. The BJP’s rise in vote share is mostly driven by the disenchantment of a class which is fed up with schemes which benefit people and who do not pay direct taxes. It does not imply support for BJP’s particular strategies, which would actually have minimal effect in their mental day to day lives.

In the context of Modi’s return to power, his schemes focusing on the construction of toilets, electricity connection and gas supplies in the rural sector also had a very strong cognitive value. The Balakot strikes galvanised his image as a strong leader, who could take decisive decisions. But in recent times, the impact of these narratives is slowly fading and people need newer and stronger initiatives which could excite favourable cognitive patterns. That has been one of the key reasons behind the BJP’s dismal performance in key state elections.

There are significant barriers when it comes to replicating Kejriwal’s model at the national level. Offering free transport or waiving off electricity bills on a large scale is not economically feasible. Hence, AAP may find it difficult to leverage these successes on a pan India level, as his actions have localised cognitive values, confined to Delhi.

Also read: With Another Win in Delhi, Is Arvind Kejriwal Moving to the National Pulpit?

However, AAP does pose a significant threat as other governments may misread his adventurism in the field of freebies and can create a catastrophic burden on the taxpayer. Despite all these, he has sent a strong lesson to other governments that by focusing on health, education and basic necessities, voters’ thoughts can be significantly swayed in a specific direction, cutting across caste and religious lines, which carries some hope for the future.

Kejriwal has conditioned the psyche of Delhi in a manner that residents tend to strongly associate water, electricity, transportation, school and healthcare with him, which accounts for his grandiose victory in the heart of Hindi heartland.

Dhiraj Sinha holds a doctorate from the University of Cambridge. He has authored several research papers in the field of systems driven far away from equilibrium.

Why Kejriwal 3.0 Must See the AAP Go National

Having discredited the party which was the principal opposition to the BJP, it is incumbent upon AAP to provide the country with a national alternative.

As early leads turned into a second resounding victory for AAP in the national capital, it became clear that the demise of Sheila Dikshit had caused more damage to the BJP than to her own party, the now decimated Congress. If only she were around to mount a campaign, the Congress might have been able to rake in a respectable vote share, thereby benefiting the BJP.

What happened instead was a complete annihilation of the saffron party. A lot is being said and will be said about the reasons behind this victory. The AAP is definitely worthy of all the appreciation directed towards it. However, with a little over 7 years of political experience under its belt, it is time that we assess what Arvind Kejriwal and his party’s plans for the near future are.

While novel policies related to issues such as education and healthcare are being hailed as the primary reasons behind the AAP’s massive victory, one should recall that the party’s roots lie in an ambush campaign against UPA-II. Against the backdrop of the CAG’s damning report regarding 2G allocation under UPA-I, the India Against Corruption (IAC) campaign, of which Arvind Kejriwal and his team were at the front, brought the UPA-II down to its knees.

Only two years after an impressive performance in the 2009 general elections, Manmohan Singh’s government had lost the battle of perception. The fact that it was pitted against civil society and not just another political party only worsened the situation. What followed was a prolonged phase of policy paralysis, with weary bureaucrats and ministers unwilling to take decisions. Exacerbated by some poor economic policymaking and other self-goals, this paralysis was perceived to be the primary reason behind the ensuing economic slowdown. It was this very despair and frustration that allowed Narendra Modi to sell the Gujarat model of development and storm into power at the Centre.

Also read: AAP Has Successfully Forged a Model for Regional Forces to Emulate

Two national elections later, Prime Minister Modi’s record on governance is a mixed bag. However, it is clear that his government’s position on critical issues such as the nation’s plurality and respect for democratic institutions completely contradicts the spirit of the popular anti-corruption movement, which laid the foundations of his entry into national politics.

At the same time, even eight years after the IAC movement, the Congress, despite victories across a few states, does not seem to have recovered. Its serious lack of credibility – a combined result of the early wounds inflicted by the IAC campaign, innumerable self-goals and persistent attacks by a merciless BJP – is one of the primary reasons behind the rise of the ruthless Modi-Shah duo. To be fair, one can argue that on a number of issues for which it was blamed, the Congress technically stands vindicated.

The suspected lynchpins behind the 2G case were acquitted by a CBI court in 2017 and despite all his threats, Kejriwal did not have adequate evidence to prove anything against Sheila Dikshit. The perception battle, however, is still lost. Worryingly though, the very fabric of India’s liberal democracy is being strained through frequent assaults in the form of laws and policies and it is no longer a viable option to wait for the Congress to get its act together anytime soon.

Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal addresses supporters after party’s victory in the state assembly polls. Photo: PTI/Ravi Choudhary

It is therefore incumbent upon Kejriwal and AAP to undertake all possible efforts to provide the country with a national alternative. Having discredited the party that otherwise would have been the principal opposition to the BJP at the Centre, Kejriwal and his team should now chin up and prepare for a larger role in national politics.

The party’s poor performance in the 2014 national elections and subsequent unsuccessful forays into states like Goa, Rajasthan and Punjab – where they conceded self-goals – did not bring much success. So, the party would be forgiven for being sceptical of a reentry. It is also true that the battle for Delhi was unlike that of any other state. Larger states with diverse issues and more entrenched identity politics will require different kinds of political strategies. In addition, national success requires delegation and decentralisation, and AAP’s past record does not inspire too much confidence on these fronts.

Also read: AAP: Soft Hindutva or a Bulwark Without Illusions?

It is, however, time that AAP gets its act together. With a popular Hindi-speaking leader who understands modern-day politics, an enthusiastic party structure that is not yet associated with nepotism or corruption and the perception of being efficient administrators (much like Modi), the party has some of the key ingredients needed to challenge the BJP.

What it lacks, among other things, are resources and a wider party infrastructure. A project on this scale could take years, if not decades and AAP needs to start working on it right away. In this regard, reports that the party is planning to contest local body elections across the country indicate it realises the need to expand. This will allow them to sell their model of efficient provision of public goods at the micro-level, which might then pave the way for success in bigger electoral battles.

If these challenges are met, then the party could emerge as a credible national alternative in the current political scenario.

Kartikeya Batra is pursuing his PhD in Economics at the University of Maryland, College Park. Previously, as part of Harvard Kennedy School and IFMR’s EPoD India program, he worked in the domain of rural economics across several states in India. 

AAP: Soft Hindutva or a Bulwark Without Illusions?

It is necessary to critically analyse the secularist critiques of AAP’s victory.

Following the victory of the Aam Aadmi Party, there have been many criticisms from a secularist perspective that have been made against Arvind Kejriwal and AAP for basically “working around the boundaries set by the Hindu nationalists” and embracing a “softer version of their politics,” or pursuing a “pragmatic self-preserving electoralism” which is “dangerous in its complacency” towards BJP’s majoritarianism. 

Even as there are elements of truth in these contentions, it is also necessary to critically analyse them.

Any understanding of the limitations, and even the possibilities of AAP as a political formation will have to reckon with the structural context in which it operates.

Now, as the critics allege, to celebrate the AAP victory as a decisive defeat of Hindutva is of course grossly misplaced. Yet, to believe that there would be no difference between an AAP victory or BJP victory, ideologically, in terms of its impact on secularism, or the state of minorities, especially, Muslims, is to see politics as a zero-sum game.

Or, it is to crave for a purity in politics that does not exist anywhere in reality.

The first thing that has to be acknowledged is the unprecedented nature of AAP’s victories in Indian political history: a party winning above 90% seats in back-to-back elections. The present victory is especially coming after five years of blatant hostility by the central government, when the BJP is still strong nationally, its Hindutva agenda at its most dominant, and when the popularity of Modi is hardly affected by Kashmir or CAA.

Arvind Kejriwal at his office after assuming charge for the third time as Delhi CM. Photo: Twitter/@AamAadmiParty

Further, crucially, in terms of financial resources, the capture of institutions and the unprecedented control of media, a contest between BJP and the AAP is spectacularly mismatched.

And the fact that the BJP still threw everything it had in the ring, and not just through the most odious and dangerous kind of communal polarisation, only goes to show how crucial this election was for it, and post-facto, proves how significant its defeat is. If there was a moment to pursue short term electoralism to defeat a rampaging majoritiarianism, even if temporarily, it was this. 

Also read: ‘AAP Can Go Left or Right, Wherever the Solution Lies’: Party’s Social Media Chief

The flaw in the critics’ position is not that what they are asking from Kejriwal and AAP in terms of a strong secularist stand is in anyway theoretically problematic, but that the demand that is made glosses over a long-term understanding as well as the practical context. 

And this is practical context is one in which there is already a “people” constituted, in nationalist and Hindu majoritarian ways, over decades of ideological and pedagogical training even before Hindu nationalism formally captured power. It is impossible to assume that this electorate will dramatically change their political views to radically adopt critical positions, on say, nationalism, Muslims, and Kashmir. 

Propertied members of resident welfare associations, or those who are still in thrall of the diktats of khap panchayats do not fundamentally alter their worldview when they vote for AAP. That is why you see at least one-third of the electorate who vote for AAP and Congress in the Delhi assembly elections, shifting, without any ideological dilemmas, to vote for Narendra Modi in Lok Sabha, even when these choices have significantly different effects on the minorities.

The critique of AAP cannot made in a vacuum and without understanding the conditions that have given rise to Modi and the most virulent form of Hindutva. Even as we demand that the AAP take maximalist secular positions, it is vital to do so in the context of the spectacular failures of other parties, including Left parties, in the construction of a “secular” Republic over 70 years.

Also watch | Opinion: The Cowardice Hidden Behind AAP’s Victory

Mayawati’s enthusiastic support for the reading down of Article 370, and lukewarm resistance to CAA, and the Left’s softer stand on Sabarimala after the election defeat in Kerala are reminders of the immense challenges faced by even the most ideologically oriented political formations in India (which are also opposed to Hindu nationalism).

Of course, we cannot only electorally herald secularism without it having resonance in the wider civil society and in our everyday lives. To place that responsibility on AAP, a post-ideological populist party, when every other political party has turned into political machines which have staked everything at the altar of electoral politics and state power, is transposing the theorists’ wish list onto the practitioners of messy politics.

Interestingly, the critiques of AAP from a purist perspective are not new at all. They have existed right from its beginning in the India-against-corruption movement: that it is ideologically Hindu majoritarian, and that economically too, it is on the right, with its technocratism and neoliberalism. 

File photo of Anna Hazare. Photo: PTI

But what is significant is to recognise the various transmutations that it has undergone since then.

Thus, from being courted by business interests to banning FDI in retail in Delhi and briefly taking on Indian big capital, from embodying orderly and technocratic rationality to briefly becoming an “anarchist” and chaotic force more interested in cantankerous street politics, from being governed by urban middle class interests to drawing a pan-class support, especially of the poor and working classes, from viscerally challenging the persona of Narendra Modi to completely avoiding it, from basically being propelled by big television media to being demonised by it, from a social movement opposed to politics to a political party with undesirable concentration of power in its leader, etc., there are more contradictions on display.

And for a party accused of pandering to soft Hindutva, Kejriwal, to the consternation of Hindutva supporters, very recently claimed that we have tried to run the government on the path shown by Jesus Christ.”

More importantly, for the technocratism that characterises the AAP government it has also adopted a Universal Basic Income approach, and posed some “challenge [to] the neoliberal logic of privatisation” in health, education, water and electricity. In times, when profit has become the only buzzword in market-led societies, it is progressive to talk about government schools, and public goods, especially in a context like that of India with its abysmal human development indicators. 

The importance of AAP in Indian politics is that it is the only new political formation in a long time to break the gridlock of electoral machinery controlled by money and personnel power without mobilising on the basis of caste, religion or ethnicity. Of course, the uniqueness of Delhi as a city-state has also helped this.

Ultimately, even when we recognise the people’s ideological encrustations, we cannot seem them in a reductionist fashion. Otherwise, there will be no scope for social change. Simultaneously, the struggle for social change, and the construction of a new people is a long drawn out one contending with many unpalatable realities. 

The critical factor in AAP’s victory has been an unprecedented 60% of women (compared to 35% for the BJP) voting for it. And despite the hegemony of Hindutva, Ram Mandir, Kashmir, CAA, Shaheen Bagh, etc., only 7% of voters were motivated to vote on these issues. Can these small openings turn into a sustained critique of Hindu nationalism and majoritarianism? 

The critical question is this: is a focus on governance and development, by skirting vital political issues, or addressing fundamental divisions in society, sufficient to counter a dominant Hindutva nationally and in the long run?

Can the people’s “common experience” of doing development differently, as Aditya Nigam contends, change the “terms of the narrative itself” and herald new possibilities against Hindutva, or is it that egregious technocratic measures like surveillance cameras in government schools cannot hope to build citizens capable of upholding the values of the Constitution?

It is important to focus not only on AAP’s position on secularism, but also on the worrying transformation of the AAP in other areas.

For a party that has been supported by an overwhelming percentage of Dalits, and substantial numbers of OBCs in 2015 and 2020, its leaders and representatives have been dominated by upper castes. Similarly, despite the tremendous support of women, only around 13% of the elected MLAs are women.

More appallingly, for a party that claims to represent the “common man” and novel ways of politics, there is a drastic change in the nature of its representatives. As many as 53% of its current MLAs have serious criminal charges against them (even more than the BJP), and 73% of its MLAs are crorepatis, with average assets of MLAs being Rs. 14.96 crores (more than BJP MLAs’ Rs. 9.10 crores).

Thus, the critique of AAP’s secularism, or the lack of it, has to be again placed in this structural context of the seemingly inescapable claws of the larger political system, which is not only about what Satish Deshpande calls as the BJP’s “unchallenged monopoly over agenda-setting.”

It is vital to be clear that the Aam Aadmi Party is not going to herald any revolution.

At the same time, in the context of an unprecedented capture of the state by Hindutva forces, and a political and social discourse saturated by unbridled hate for Muslims, it is equally vital to recognise that drawing the conversation back to health, education, water and electricity has more critical resonance than in ordinary times, and that a party that comes to power on the basis of the support of 83% Muslims is not ideologically the same as a party that seeks to rule on the basis of a toxic exclusion of the Muslim citizen.

Nissim Mannathukkaren is with Dalhousie University, Canada, and tweets @nmannathukkaren. 

An elaboration of some of the arguments in the article can be found in the author’s paper, The ‘People’ and the ‘Political’: Aam Aadmi and the Changing Contours of the Anti-Corruption Movement, in Rise of Saffron Power: Reflections on Indian Politics, edited by Mujib Rahman, New Delhi: Routledge, 2018. 

AAP Has Successfully Forged a Model for Regional Forces to Emulate

The phenomenal ingenuity of AAP has firmly put in place politics of honest hard work on behalf of the citizenry without turning away from bold social welfare measures.

Months after the Bharatiya Janata Party rode to electoral victory in the 2014 Lok Sabha polls, a fledgeling new activist outfit, christened the Aam Aadmi Party, won the Delhi state assembly elections with an aplomb that was rare in modern Indian electoral history – 67 of 70 seats.

Who would have thought that in the aftermath of the second Modi triumph at the Centre five years later, the 2020 Delhi assembly elections would offer such a déjà vu moment? And how: After all the blood and gore that came with the rightwing assault by Hindutva, AAP, the band of merry and undeterred Ninjas, has once again trounced the so-nationalist nose, garnering an astounding 62 out of 70 seats.

That this has been demonstrably the result of a sweet quotidian compact between a truly people’s party and the people at large must bode very well for those pundits whose cynical knowledgeability often gets the better of their faith in a truly democratic politics. As indeed it bodes well for the republic at large.

Also read: Why Kejriwal Shouldn’t Be Criticised for Not Running an Ideological Campaign

My takeaway from the happening is best stated in the words of a citizen who spoke to Anjali Aitwal at NDTV:

“The results have proved that true nationalists are not those who refused to fly the tricolour at Nagpur for fifty-two years and who call people –including a Kejriwal – ‘terrorists’ at the drop of a hat; true nationalists are those who work to alleviate ordinary citizens’ real and concrete needs without favour or discrimination.”

Golden words that politicians and their followers might truly hold close to their hearts.

Accused of  dispensing “freebees”, yet another AAP voter spoke thus on behalf of the accused AAP government – what you see as “freebees” are social welfare measures that any caring  government owes to the hard-working mass who produce wealth for the polity and the state, underscoring cannily that Delhi still remains only the second state with a surplus of revenues in the country – testimony to “good governance”.

As to the no-holds-barred calumny against Shaheen Bagh, that the AAP candidate from the Okhla constituency, which Shaheen Bagh is a part of, has won with the largest margin of any – a whopping  71,000 votes – is telling. Considering that, in this constituency of a lakh and ten thousand voters, only 45,000 are Muslims, it is a so salutary conclusion that the defeat of the Hindutva campaign has come indeed from Hindus themselves.

A circumstance that emphatically underlines the reality that Shaheen Bagh has never been a “Muslim” event but a grand coming together of citizens from all denominations and persuasions – a fact anathema to the Hindutva propagandists who left no gruesome stone unturned to project Shaheen Bagh as a “conspiracy” mounted by the usual suspects within the country.

Also read: After Election Losses, Sangh’s Hindutva Pitch Will Be Even Louder and Sharper

The secularism at Shaheen Bagh has thus been as self-evident and sentient as AAP’s refusal to make any strident protestations of its own commitment to secularism. That a visit to the Hanuman temple can be a normal aspect of that point of view has been another calming rebuff to those who tend to claim suzerainty over the Hindu faith. Indeed, nothing could be more telling about this than the statement made by the RSS ideologue, Bhayyaji Joshi, who said that opposing the BJP was not tantamount to opposing Hinduism.

Arvind Kejriwal, his wife Sunita and Manish Sisodia at a Hanuman temple after winning the Delhi elections on Tuesday. Photo: PTI

Wherever one interacted with ordinary voters at nukkads and street corners, disgust with the politics of polarisation was fearlessly articulated. At many places, Hindus who had voted for the BJP voiced resentment at the suggestion that they could not be real Hindus if they did not climb the Hindutva bandwagon, or sufficiently suspect Muslims of being enemy agents about to reduce Hindus to a dangerously emaciated minority.

As I had occasion to state in a previous column, that the Modi-Shah duo seem to finally have brought about a fine unintended consequence – that of cementing a secular solidarity among citizens at large, thanks in no small part to their sectarian insistence on the CAA legislation and their intent to follow up with a patently devious purpose in carrying out a nation-wide NRC. This countrywide repudiation of a religion-based principle of citizenship has thus had the most salutary effect of awakening the polity at large to a new insidious subversion of the republic’s raison d’etre.

And in that process, Shaheen Bagh must be counted as a vanguard that has bolstered a nation-wide secular resolve like never before in recent years.

Also read: Arvind Kejriwal May Be Liberal India’s Darling, But He Isn’t the Solution We Need

That the entire artillery of the Hindutva campaign – all the way from the prime minister to the home minister to a bevy of other ministers and elected representatives, supported by leaders of allied parties – has been so conclusively defeated by the sanity of the common Indian is indeed a watershed moment of incalculable possibilities. The question must now be about how sensibly and with how much hard work and organisational skill pro-secular republic political forces across the country harvest the events in Delhi to yield a lasting nation-wide fruit in the months to come.

That the Congress party should have so obviously held back its horses to facilitate the defeat of the Hindutva forces is indeed a most constructive political omen – one that all regional forces may emulate in their own time and place as other elections follow.

For now, let us give thanks to the phenomenal ingenuity and grit of AAP for having firmly put in place successful politics of honest hard work on behalf of the citizenry at large without turning away from the boldly unprecedented measures they have taken in school education, health care, in quotidian domestic budgetary support to services like electric power and water supply, in women’s safety concerns etc. without denting the capacity of the state to bolster its revenues, warding off corruption and unwarranted expenditure on class-based fanfare.

Think how much more the republic needs of the same.

Badri Raina has taught at Delhi University.

After Election Losses, Sangh’s Hindutva Pitch Will Be Even Louder and Sharper

The BJP’s agenda is bigger than just electoral victories.

Since winning the 2019 Lok Sabha elections with a convincing majority, the Bharatiya Janata Party has lost four state elections one after the other. The BJP’s formula was the same in all – large doses of nationalism, Hindutva and demonising of the Muslims – all delivered by Narendra Modi and Amit Shah, with supporting roles played by Adityanath and some local leaders. Nowhere did it succeed in mustering up a majority.

In Haryana, the party fared poorly and managed to hurriedly cobble together a government by roping in the Jannayak Janata Party. In Maharashtra, its partner the Shiv Sena walked away after the results and we saw the tragi-comic farce of Devendra Fadnavis being sworn in surreptitiously before dawn, only to find that Ajit Pawar could not bring in the numbers acquired.

In Jharkhand, the Jharkhand Mukti Morcha and Congress won and now, in Delhi, Aam Aadmi Party has resoundingly defeated the BJP, which has won just eight sets in a contest where it had hoped to emerge with a majority.

Any party would take a close look at its electoral strategy and recognise, at the very least, that at the state level, voters are more concerned about issues that affect their lives – health, education, infrastructure. And that neither Kashmir nor the Citizenship (Amendment) Act and certainly not the so-called dangers to Hinduism, rouse any kind of emotions. It would sit down and recalibrate its campaigns for the important state elections that are coming up in Bihar, Bengal, Assam and Tamil Nadu over the next couple of years.

Also read: By Rejecting the BJP, Delhi Voters Have Busted Three Important Myths

Not the BJP. Already its supporters are saying that the party, in 2020, has won nearly three times its last tally of three. And the leaders are claiming that the jump in voting percentage by over 6% shows that the campaigning based on the CAA did find a response. Thus, it will continue on those lines in the coming months.

These may appear to be logical assumptions, seen from the lens of the BJP, but the real reasons may lie elsewhere. No party likes to tamper too much with its winning formula and, it is possible that the BJP, though it fared very badly, may hold on to these flimsy gains.

For the BJP and the larger Sangh parivar, however, winning elections is not the sole objective. A victory would be welcome and helpful too, yet, it is only a stepping stone towards the ultimate goal, which remains unchanged. The Sangh is clear-eyed on where it wants to reach and what it wants to achieve – a Hindu rashtra, put into place by a combination of state power, the levers of government and other completely legal measures, buttressed by a continuous hate campaign on the ground. This involves not just marginalising Muslims, or even disenfranchising them; the aim is to dehumanise them to the extent that the rest of the country is convinced that the project is perfectly legitimate and, in fact, much required.

Union home minister Amit Shah at an election campaign before the Delhi assembly elections. Photo: PTI/Kamal Kishore

Thus, a slogan like ‘Goli maaron Gaddaron ko (Shoot the traitors)’, by a junior minister may have been said in the heat of the election (which is no excuse), but it is in sync with the party’s strategy to keep the pot boiling by painting Muslims as anti-nationals. There are numerous examples of such toxic speech, as we have seen, and they come so quick and fast that it becomes difficult to counter each one of them. Gradually, they become normalised, even mainstream; no decent Indian, and there are millions, wants to harm Muslims, but even if a seed of doubt enters their minds, the Sangh’s job is done.

Also read: Debate: AAP May be Only Numerically Feasible Alternative to BJP but It’s no Great Liberal Hope

It won’t be easy of course. Indians understand the value of harmony, of living peacefully with their neighbours. Most of us are also too busy making a living to be preoccupied with these concerns. We are also patriotic and don’t feel the need to get a certificate from the BJP.

But think about how far we have come in just a generation or two. Blatantly communal sentiments are openly expressed in public by more and more people; Narendra Modi’s support base remains loyal to him, despite his incessant hate speeches and even his government’s inefficiency. Popular culture is happy to fan rabid nationalism in a way never seen before.

The Sangh’s capture of cultural institutions is almost complete. Education of school children is undergoing a massive overhaul and subverted history books are being introduced. And, the NPR and NRC are on their way to complete the job.

It is also worrying to see the lack of a robust political counter-narrative. Not too many political parties – the CPM is an honourable exception – have come out strongly against Hindutva or even the CAA-NRC exercise. Arvind Kejriwal was happy to stay away from the protests; it has been seen as a tactic to not fall for the BJP’s trap. Let us see what he does now. His Hindutva signalling has long been problematic. The Shiv Sena continues to waffle and Nitish Kumar remains quiet on the law.

Also read: With Another Win in Delhi, Is Arvind Kejriwal Moving to the National Pulpit?

As for the Congress, it has lost the plot. Individual leaders like Amarinder Singh have taken the lead, and Kamal Nath has followed, but the party itself remains its rudderless self. The ‘soft Hindutva’ did not pay any dividends; now the party does not know how to proceed.

It is the people of India who are standing up for their country. Shaheen Bagh and its many countrywide iterations have undoubtedly caught the BJP by surprise. The results in state elections show the citizen’s resolve to resist the spread of hatred and communalism. The Sangh will not stop its relentless march, and will, undoubtedly, raise the pitch; electoral losses will make it more resolute, not less. Yet, the journey will not be smooth.

EC Strips DCP Crime of Poll Work for Revealing Information About Kapil Baisala

A warning was issued to Rajesh Deo, saying his statements have the effect of “adversely impacting the elections”.

New Delhi: The Election Commission of India has issued a warning to deputy commissioner of police (crime) of Delhi Police, Rajesh Deo, and directed that he not be assigned any work related to the assembly elections in the national capital. Action was taken against the officer because Deo had on February 4 revealed to the media details of an “investigation which has political connotations”.

The officer had disclosed to the media that the man caught for firing three shots in the air at Shaheen Bagh had been identified as Kapil Gujjar nee Baisala and that data retrieved from his deleted WhatsApp account revealed pictures in which he was shown to be a member of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP).

This had led to a war of words between the BJP and AAP, with each party accusing the other of ‘dirty politics’.

Senior AAP leader Sanjay Singh asked on whose directions the Delhi Police accused his party. “Before the police revealed it (Baisala being an AAP member), how did BJP’s Delhi president Manoj Tiwari come to know about it?” Singh asked.

The DCP had stated that Baisala and his father joined the AAP in early 2019, a claim that was denied by the family of the accused.

Kapil Baisala after being taken into police custody. Photo: PTI

Singh asked if cop acted on Shah’s orders

Singh had questioned if the police officer was acting at the behest of Union home minister Amit Shah because when the model code of conduct (MCC) is in place, the police cannot make claims about investigations that may have a bearing on the polls.

The Election Commission seemed to agree with this argument. The poll panel in its order noted that “a report obtained in this connection shows that Shri Deo, referring to an investigation into an incident of firing in the protest site in Shaheen Bagh made statements to the media that the accused with his father had joined a particular political party a year ago and the conspiracy angle will be established.”

The Commission said it “considered the matter in details and is of the considered view that the above-referred statements referring to a political party at this stage even as the investigation is still going on has the effect of adversely impacting the elections.”

Also Read: Delhi Polls: AAP, BJP Election Songs Reflect Tones of Their Campaigns

‘Conduct could have consequences on free and fair elections’

It added that “this action was totally uncalled for” and held that “the conduct on the party of Shri Rajesh Deo has consequences on the holding of free and fair elections.”

Therefore, the Commission directed action against the senior police officer. It said a warning shall be issued communicating the displeasure of the poll panel on his conduct and a copy of the same would be placed in his CR Dossier.

It barred Deo from being assigned any poll-related work. The order sent to the commissioner of police also directed that a compliance report be submitted by 6 pm on February 6.

Meet Shadab Farooq, the Jamia Student Who Took a Bullet Last Week

Shadab Farooq, the Jamia Millia Islamia student who found himself facing a gun on January 30 only to walk up to the man wielding it in an effort to calm him down, has been commended for his bravery by many even as others have tried to vilify him with claims of the whole thing being a set up.

The 22-year-old Kashmiri, a student of M.A. Mass Communication in Jamia Millia Islamia’s AJK-MCRC department, is rather beloved by the student community. Shadab has been at the university since 2016 when he joined to get a Bachelor’s degree in English Literature.

As a student in the English department, Shadab was a member of the department’s dramatics society ‘Expressions’ as well as a member of the university’s drama club ‘Josh’.

Abhay Yadav, a final year student of the English department, said Shadab had a big impact on him when he first joined Jamia:

“When I started my journey with the English department and Expressions in 2017, there were not many seniors with whom I had a personal relationship with. Sure, a lot of them would talk to us but there were only a few who really stuck around to help and to listen to ideas. Shadab was amongst the few people who really empathised with me and made feel like I wasn’t alone in a new place. It is mostly the reason why I have always looked up to him.

“Everyone knows that he is a brilliant actor and an enthusiastic artist. Even though Shadab bhai is an introvert, he is always there to encourage you. For my first directorial venture Macbeth, the first script-reading was conducted in the presence of Shadab bhai since I trusted his opinion the most. He had a penchant for swooping in at the last moment and fixing things. We were participating in a street play where the student who was orchestrating the performance fell ill. Shadab bhai immediately came into the picture and with only the basic outline of the play and he crushed the performance with the immense confidence he has in his craft.

“It was encouraging to look at the amount of confidence and belief he has in himself and it was evident in last week’s incident too when not even the police had the conviction to approach the armed attacker. But Shadab bhai was there again to confront the man and to talk him out of firing the pistol. He just wanted to help the man – he is someone who has always encouraged open conversations even with people he disagrees with.

“I write Hindi poetry and even though Shadab bhai doesn’t understand the sort of hefty Hindi I was used to writing, he is always interested in learning something new each day. The curiosity of that man inspires me. Right now, all I wish for is his speedy recovery. He is a very strong man and no matter what the media outlets run, everyone that knows him what an exceptional man Shadab bhai is.”

Photo: Special arrangement

Along with Expressions, till last year, Shadab was also a part of the university’s drama club Josh. His flatmate and friend Ameya Chilwal, also a student at Jamia, looks back on his first experiences with Shadab:

“Shadab bhai was the one who actually took me with him to join Josh in 2017 when I came to Delhi for the first time. Every newcomer in the city wants a support system, for me it was Shadab bhai. He has been by my side for over three years now and even to this day all of us that need help or advice go to him because we know that he will listen. His tone is so genteel and respectful that you never felt that you are being vulnerable in front of the wrong person.

“During yesterday’s incident as well, all Shadab bhai was doing was trying to make the armed attacker understand how nothing would come of his actions. That is his general attitude towards everything – wherever he could convince someone to do the right thing, he would intervene and do so.”

Syed Ali Haider, a close friend of Shadab (also known as Ashu to his close friends) discussed the aftermath of the incident:

“The major reason for calmness after the incident was due to Ashu’s behaviour. All our anxiety and the feeling of being distraught after hearing what had happened turned into relief once we saw him smile and raise his injured arm to bid us salaam when he saw us. He was constantly smiling and giving a thumbs up to everyone who asked him about how he was.

“His attitude was that of a survivor and not a victim.

“I’ve been friends with him for more than three years now and it’s in his nature to stop any injustice happening in front of his eyes. Be it a fight between two people in Nizamuddin basti, be it a petty thief stealing something in front of him. I remember an incident that took place at Kathputli Colony in Delhi where photography was banned due to the alleged mafia activity that takes place there. Ashu entered the colony with his camera to document the slums in the area and he was stopped by armed guards who threatened him with guns. He tried talking to them to explain why he was doing this but they didn’t want to listen and threatened him further.

“I don’t know if it’s the Kashmiri grit in him that is the reason behind his fearlessness or something else, but Ashu is definitely a unique man.”

Photo: Prabhat Tiwari

In the aftermath of the shooting incident, Shadab was moved from Holy Family hospital to the AIIMS trauma centre in the evening where he received treatment for the gunshot wound to his left arm. The bullet was successfully dislodged and he was discharged Friday morning.

Shadab Farooq was amongst the hundreds of anti-Citizenship Amendment protestors that were a part of the peaceful march from Jamia Millia Islamia to Rajghat on Mahatma Gandhi’s death anniversary when he was shot and injured by the gunman with links to the Sangh parivar.

The Jamia Coordination Committee, which had called the protest march, condemned the incident and raised questions regarding Delhi Police’s conduct during the incident and their lack of proactivity. The police has taken the shooter into protective custody.

Shireen Khan is a student of M. A. Mass communication at Jamia Millia Islamia.

Featured image credit: Mohammad Meherban

Delhi Polls, Hate Speech and BJP’s Most Reckless Communal Campaign yet

Fighting an election rooted in the concerns of the people is far more challenging than running a feckless campaign.

From all indications, the Delhi poll campaign is going to go down as one the most reckless communal campaigns launched by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), since ascending to power at the Centre in 2014. Less than a week ahead of the polls, outflanked by its rival, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), the BJP has decided to run a rash and heedless campaign, consequences be damned.

The Election Commission, the institution supposed to end such continued violation of the model code of conduct, seems to dawdle and indulge the habitual law breakers. The Commission’s half-hearted reprimands to those breaking every code in the rule book, have the very effect they are meant to have. The tepidness of such measures, the reluctance with which the EC gently raps the guilty leaders, further emboldens them to dig in their heels and stick to the communal refrain.

In creating this macabre political theatre, the BJP hopes to dent AAP’s well-entrenched credibility among the people of Delhi – with the hate campaign standing in for the desperate means of a desperate party. The BJP is not interested in engaging in issues of governance. The 2014 talk of vikas has long since been dumped. Communal polarisation is what solely interests the BJP now and occupies all of its attention.

From Bengal’s BJP state president Dilip Ghosh to Union minister Anurag Thakur, BJP party leaders are talking only of guns and bullets.

The series of events that played out over this Saturday encapsulates the mind of the saffron party and what the BJP hopes to achieve through this orchestrated campaign of intimidation. After all, as home minister Amit Shah succinctly reminds us – heed the chronology to understand the larger project.

Hours before 25-year-old Kapil Gujjar opened fire at Shaheen Bagh on Saturday evening, Uttar Pradesh chief minister Adityanath accused the protesters of “supporting terrorists” in Kashmir at a rally in East Delhi.

Making outlandish claims, the UP CM charged his Delhi counterpart Arvind Kejriwal with “supplying biryani” to the Shaheen Bagh protesters. Those protesting the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), Adityanath said, do not want India to emerge as a major world power (“sreshtha Bharat”).

At a different site in Shaheen Bagh, the shooter, before being overpowered, shouted  “Hindu Rashtra zindabad” and “I want Hindu Rashtra.” “Hamare desh mein kisi ki nahin chalegi, sirf Hinduon ki chalegi (in our country, only Hindus will have their way, no one else will)” and “Jai Shri Ram,” he declared. This Sunday marks the 50th day of continued protests at Shaheen Bagh.

Also read: Bullets, Biryani, Shaheen Bagh: The Essence of Adityanath’s Delhi Poll Speeches

The same day, on the eve of budget presentation, Anurag Thakur, the minister of state for finance, was seen praying before before a Hanuman idol at home. “The Modi government believes in ‘sabka sath, sabka vikas (development for all),” he told ANI.

But that’s not what Thakur emphasised at an earlier rally, which seemed to have incentivised the shooters at Jamia Millia Islamia and Shaheen Bagh. At a poll meeting in Rithala constituency last month, the Union minister led a crowd in chanting, “Desh ke gaddaron ko, goli maaro…” (Shoot the traitors). A couple of days later, on Mahatma Gandhi’s birth anniversary, a man whipping out a gun, opened fire and injured one student at Jamia Millia Islamia.

BJP supporters listening to UP CM Adityanath’s speech ahead of the Delhi polls in February 2020. Photo: PTI

Heed the chronology of violence – in speech and in action. Heed the prime minister’s silence after every act of such violence – from the killing of anti-CAA protesters in UP, to validation of violence as a means of control, by his party’s major and minor leaders. Regrettably, there is little or no room for obfuscating the real aim behind such the studied silence.

In the midst of this palpable hate, lost are the very essential markers of what make for a model of good governance. The AAP government’s emphasis on education and the BJP-led central government’s blithe indifference to education cannot be over emphasised in the current poll campaign.

Also read: Delhi Police Grants Permission to Chant ‘Shoot the Traitors’, Then Backtracks

The AAP’s campaign is pivoted around two key issues – health and education. The party has drawn attention to its performance in these two customarily neglected sectors. While AAP focussed on the improved government schools and mohalla clinics, the BJP talked up violence. Campaigning in Madipur constituency on January 25, BJP MP Parvesh Verma, reportedly, described Arvind Kejriwal as a “terrorist.”  In a video of the incident Verma warned voters “if Kejriwal returns, Shaheen-Bagh type of people will take over streets.”

The thing is, fighting an election rooted in the concerns of the people is far more challenging than running a feckless campaign. A campaign that brings in its trail dangerous implications for a range of people – Muslims, dissidents, students, women. “The targeting of enemies – minorities, liberals, secularists, leftists, urban naxals, intellectuals, assorted protestors – is not driven by a calculus of ordinary politics. It is driven by will, ideology and hate, pure and simple,” wrote Pratap Bhanu Mehta recently.

It is indeed ironic that on the day that BJP leaders queued up to pay homage to Mahatma Gandhi, Jamia witnessed an incident of shooting. We are yet to hear its unequivocal condemnation from top BJP leaders. What we do hear instead is direct and indirect endorsement of hate speech and violent action. It seems that the real objective – or the “story” as we call it, is often hidden is words that are not spoken.