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IE Highlights
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Bangalored
The Indian Express :
To be sure, those are not the only questions in Karnataka today. The state is divided into at least six distinct regions. The end of Congress dominance in the state, after the formation of the first non-Congress government in 1983, set in motion the process of each region developing its own political identity. Politics has travelled closer to the people. But it is also true that neither politics nor policy has significantly moderated glaring inter-regional disparities. The Hyderabad-Karnataka region, a traditional Congress bastion, remains a laggard in development, for instance. Then, ever since Devraj Urs’s successful attempts to mobilise disadvantaged groups in the early ’70s, political competition has become more inclusive in the state. A rainbow coalition of castes and communities has come to stay in the corridors of power, where the principle of power-sharing has become entrenched. This has ensured that leaders from a broad range of social groups exercise substantive influence in politics and policy. The growing ethnicisation of a party like the JD(S) may represent a reversal of the trend. And the BJP’s mobilisation style may put pressure on the state’s broad coalitions.
Plus, Karnataka’s Bangalore question is more piquant than is realised. Institutions of rural self-governance have a long history in the state, culminating in the 1983 act under the Hegde government whose provisions were borrowed by the framers of the 73rd Amendment to the Indian Constitution. Yet, even as the state has made a pioneering effort to operationalise the meaning of the 73rd Amendment, it has spectacularly ignored the call of the 74th Amendment on urban local government. Karnataka desperately needs a government that can help the people take ownership of its cities as centres of dynamism and growth for the whole state.
editor@expressindia.com
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