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October
9, 2000
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Mamata,
Jaya and the dharma of regional power
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Sisters under
the skin
If
Jaya finds herself in the wilderness or Mamata comes up short in
attempts to storm West Bengal, it is because they dont have
a coherent political ideology
"NO
one has the right to hold the government at gunpoint. She will have
to go. Who said this about whom? And when? Its
one of the more fascinating aspects of Indian democracy that situations
and circumstances are constantly repeating themselves. In August
1998, Mamata Banerjee, having lent outside
but firm support, to the Vajpayee-led government,
found Jayalalitha an unmitigated spoiler. Today, looking back after
her five-day stand-off over oil prices with the same government,
of which her Trinamool Congress is now a part, she may perhaps find
herself more kindly disposed towards Jayalalithas hit-and-run
brand of politics which, in many ways, is not unlike her own Didi-or-die
variation.
The
parallels between the two are too many to be simply brushed aside.
Both women are driven by the obsession to acquire power in their
respective states with the one difference that while Jayalalitha
has had a shot at chief ministership, Mamata, after 20-odd years
of streetfighting, has often been able to shake Jyoti Basu but not
quite stirred him from his pedestal. So while Jayalalitha once fought
for a Tamil Nadu package, Mamata demanded a Bengal package. While
Jayalalitha projects herself as the Puratchi Thalaivi, or revolutionary
leader, Mamata claims that her party is the baby of
the people.
Both
women have vast reserves of raw courage and an instinct for the
dramatic, whether through the mysterious disappearances that Jayalalitha
once specialised in, or the intriguing appearances like Mamata sometimes
staged. Remember that famous entry into Parliament she had once
made, all bandaged on a stretcher? Or the time that she escorted
a handicapped girl who had allegedly been raped by a CPM leader
into Writers Building one fine morning in January 1993? When
she was arrested for her pains, Mamata refused to leave the Lalbazaar
police station until they had to literally push her out. That same
year in July, Jayalalitha got the nations attention by moving
a bedroll to Marina beach in her bid to get Tamil Nadu a fair share
of Cauvery water.
The
crowd-pulling skills and ability to articulate popular feelings
of both women are legendary. To this day, the memory of the one-kilometre
long pandal Jayalalitha strung up to commemorate her first year
in power as chief minister boggles the mind. And if the numbers
who turn up at Mamatas numerous public meetings were a criterion,
she should have been presiding over Writers Building by now.
The two women also have a well-nourished sense of persecution. Understandably
so, given the attacks that they have had to suffer at the hands
of their political opponents. Mamata estimates that there have been
six or seven murderous attempts made on her, while Jayalalitha has
had several ugly brushes with lumpenised political cadres, which
includes the brutal treatment meted out to her on the floor of the
Madras assembly in 1989. In an interview, Mamata once told me that
the biggest problem women in politics face is the potential threat
of violence. When they cant fight us politically,
or ideologically, they attack our person or our characters,
she had observed.
But
the comparisons between the two stormy petrels do not end here.
In fact, what is arguably the most significant similarity between
them is their distinctive style of politics. Both women have realised
the value of building a grassroots cadre that owes allegiance not
so much to the party as to themselves. The tattoos of their leader
that the Puratchi Thalaivis fans routinely sport, or the shrill
cries of Didi, didi, that follow Mamata,
symbolise relationships premised on personal loyalty and patronage,
rather than on any democratic principle. There are many senior leaders
in both the AIADMK and the Trinamool Congress who could, if they
had the courage, vouch for the authoritarianism and insecurities
of their respective leaders.
It
is a style of functioning that creates its own dependencies. Mamata,
at one stage, had to defend the nefarious activities of a Binodananda
Banerjee, a district Youth Congress president who had allegedly
murdered a party colleague, because he happened to be a valued loyalist.
Jayalalithas tenure as chief minister saw her increasingly
come under the influence of close aide, Sashikala, and her husband,
N. Natarajan, leading to the widespread alienation of senior leaders
within the AIADMK. Party politics then, instead of leading to ever
broadening avenues, ends up in narrow by-lanes and cul-de-sacs;
while grand causes are routinely invoked, everything tends to dissipate
in petty politicking.
This,
ultimately, is the tragedy of both leaders. If Jayalalitha finds
herself in the wilderness or Mamata comes up short in her attempts
to storm the Left Front citadel, it is because they have very little
to offer in terms of a coherent political ideology, or even philosophy,
and have shown very little propensity for good governance. While
corruption seeped into every crevice of the Jayalalitha administration,
Mamatas stint as Railway minister has, thus far, seen very
little apart from blatant attempts to squeeze in projects for West
Bengal at least half of which are just on paper. Both women
had no compulsions about contracting shotgun political marriages
to shore up their regional clout. Not surprisingly then, the first
demand both leaders made once they had joined their
government at the Centre was the dismissal of the existing governments
in their respective states. Its another matter that every
move the Vajpayee government made in this direction has failed thus
far.
This
dogged pursuit of personal agendas has led, in turn, to serious
compromises, including their secular credentials.
To Jayalalitha should go the singular honour of making the BJP acceptable
in Tamil Nadu; and Mamata, in her desperation to cobble together
a coalition against Jyoti Basu, has given the BJP a presence in
West Bengal that it previously did not have. The 1998 Lok Sabha
elections in West Bengal saw the newly-formed Trinamool Congress
fight on a joint plantform with the BJP. While the Trinamool emerged
with seven seats, the BJP garnered the Dum Dum constituency and
14 per cent of the total votes.
So
what does the future hold for these two women, one who made her
appearance on the political scene riding in a peacock chariot in
the heady days when MGR ruled Tamil Nadu, and the other, by dancing
on the bonnet of Jayaprakash Narayans car as a young Youth
Congress worker? This is certainly not to write them off and they
may even get their chance to strut the political scene in their
respective states. But, going by their past record, it is unlikely
that their politics will be characterised by political sagacity
or statecraft, or even a genuine commitment to peoples welfare.
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