Prakash Karat is the most powerful man in the country today, said Karan Singh, veteran Congressman, philosopher and Rajya Sabha MP, at the ‘Idea Exchange’ organised by the Indian Express last weekend. The angst is unmistakable. After all, Karan Singh is famous most recently for failing to make it to Rashtrapati Bhavan — again. And, as is well known, Karat’s party decisively rejected Singh’s presidential bid this time. But there is more to Singh’s assertion than just his deeply felt sense of being sinned against. You don’t have to be a particularly keen follower of Indian politics to know that the presidential and vice-presidential polls were only the latest instance of the Left’s exercise of its unprecedented power of veto over this government.
Ever since the era of coalition governments came to the political centre in the nineties, unconventional governing arrangements have become the norm. We have seen governments propped up by supporting parties much larger than the ruling formation. And ideologically disparate parties that have come together to be in government, only to squabble noisily over governance at every step. But we have not seen a government such as the UPA. Here, a band of 60-odd MPs has repeatedly held up crucial policy decisions, apart of course from dictating appointments to the country’s ceremonial and not-so-ceremonial posts. Be it the restructuring of higher education or pension reform, or the liberalisation of the retail sector, the Left has not just dictated government policy — or rather, lack of it — but most damagingly for this government, it has been seen to do so.
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