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IE Highlights
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Smile please
The Indian Express :
First phase, last round: BJP pulls out a minority cardPM says allies agreed to women’s Bill, RJD differsPost-Fidel Cuba sending biggest team with a shopping listNational Safety Guarantee Scheme? Law to have speed governors in all vehiclesTrashing own panel, Govt bans futures in four more
Economic reforms, let’s remember, is a political item only because of cross-party understanding on broad parameters. This understanding is not always advertised but it’s there. A similar quiet exchange could have happened on the nuclear deal. Indeed don’t underestimate the capacity of Indian politics to surprise; time permitting, some rough formula may yet emerge. But the fact is that nuclear politics could have been handled better, even given the stated positions of all the major political players. The reason it wasn’t is that the deal became a public issue when relations between political parties had already soured. Perhaps the Congress could have been a cleverer communicator. On the other hand, given the maximalist positions of the BJP and the Left, it is hard to see what else could have happened. But had relations been better it would be easy to see how much could have been achieved — just look at Pranab Mukherjee’s energetic negotiations. Mukherjee and a Mukherjee equivalent from the BJP would have likely sorted out many issues.
Better relations between the Congress and the BJP are really the most important part of a solution. There seems to be a lack of minimum chemistry between the top leaderships of both parties, and senior-middle leaders are not empowered to move things forward substantively. This has to change because Indian electoral results are unlikely to give either party a decisive mandate. Therefore, to the extent the Big Two can be counted on to mostly take the right decisions on big policy issues, the Congress and the BJP need each other sometimes to move things forward. This government may end without the Centre clearing pension reform. Both the Congress and the BJP know saying yes to pension reform is a no-brainer. Neither had the imagination to put their combined weight behind the idea.
editor@expressindia.com
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