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@JanjaWeed i am getting fed up by hearing this NEW ARGUMENT of Congress.........literally clutching the straw............

BJP only got 31% VS :hitwall: :hitwall: :hitwall:

How much Congress got last time??????

Haha after 67 years of Independence suddenly left biased and congi hacks in media ( read The HINDU editors) got Problem with First past the post system :lol::lol::lol:
Had it been a Presidential style race the result would have been like 1984 US presidential election with Congis losing all except 1 or 2 states :angel:
 
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:bad::bad::bad::bad:
If Rahul is Arjun then this time Pandavas will lose :sarcastic:
 
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Shaking Up The Frame

Taming The Bureaucracy

What will lead to greater accountability and efficiency:

  • Making the bureaucracy accountable
  • Fixing time-limit for disposing files
  • Fixing responsibility for missing files
  • Curb on raising inconsequential queries
  • Greater transparency
  • Limiting or banning post-retirement jobs
  • Reducing bureaucratic delays
  • Objective performance appraisals
  • Changing the rules of business
  • Curtailing “super time scales”
  • Better use of babus with expertise
  • Lateral entry of specialists
  • Redress complaints against babus


It was at the Think India dialogue of Network18 last year that Narendra Modi said something about the bureaucracy that went viral. “A Congress leader,” he said, “suggested a very simple solution to problems of governance: Politicians should learn to say no and bureaucrats to say yes.” A year on, as PM, he is set to discover that governance is a little more complicated.

Since making that statement, he has run a presidential-style campaign, sought and received a mandate for himself rather than his BJP and become PM. In a departure from normal practice, Modi was briefed by the secretaries even before he was sworn in. And when home secretary Anil Goswami called on him, Modi reportedly took the bureaucrat by surprise by rattling off his personal and career details. If the bureaucracy was spooked by such meticulous homework, it managed to hide its surprise—perhaps actually braced for more surprises.

They weren’t long in the coming. In his first few days in office, Modi appeared to be veering towards a presidential form of governance, if not government, cutting ministers down to size and telling bureaucrats to interact directly with him and the PMO. That’s how he governed in Gujarat: ministers and mlas did not count for much, the assembly met sparingly, bureaucrats close to the CM even handled his political campaigns. But will that model work for him as a PM?


No answers yet, but experts warn that departure from the cabinet form of government isn’t an unmixed blessing. In Good Governance: Never on India’s Radar, former Union home secretary Madhav Godbole cites examples from Indira Gandhi onwards to chronicle the decline of the cabinet system, the abdication of joint responsibility and the emergence of the PMO as a modern-day palace. The UPA, Godbole writes, could have prevented many scams if the cabinet had discussed certain issues.

The spectre of the PMO as a palace and of palace guards running the country through chosen bureaucrats has raised eyebrows. But many bureaucrats say they’d prefer to wait and watch. Some say strong-arm tactics are needed to get the administration on track. Others voice concern over such centralisation and how it might encourage crony capitalism. This isn’t a new fear. Didn’t H.D. Deve Gowda, as prime minister designate, fly into Delhi in a Reliance plane when there were seven commercial flights daily from Bangalore? That flight, in which Vijay Mallya accompanied Deve Gowda, raised eyebrows. But times have changed. Nobody batted an eyelid when Modi, as prime minister-designate, took an Adani plane to Delhi.

In his very second cabinet meeting, Modi set a 10-point framework for good governance. He followed it up by saying that bureaucrats need to be empowered. In fact, he overwhelmed them, saying they could approach him with both problems and solutions: if they e-mailed him, they’d receive a reply and if they sought an appointment they’d get it. Critics say that if Modi were really serious about teamwork, he could have met the secretaries and ministers together. Fact is, ministers still have to defend policies and their implementation in Parliament; they’d also be required to work closely with bureaucrats. Asking bureaucrats to bypass ministers, they feel, might at best have been an inadvertent slip and at worst a deliberate but unnecessary swipe at ministers.


Grapevine has it that several bureaucrats are already ratting on colleagues while trying to ingratiate themselves with the new dispensation. Ministers are already feeling sidelined as secretaries make a beeline to the PMO. Union home minister Rajnath Singh, the bureaucratic grapevine has it, had no clue that his ministry had withdrawn clearance for the extension of two senior ips officers to a central organisation at the behest of the PMO. The home secretary had not thought it necessary to brief him. The new equation, in which secretaries will be tempted to engage with the PMO, may not improve trust, efficiency or teamwork, say some bureaucrats.

One serving bureaucrat called it a recipe for disaster. It would lead to a trust deficit between ministers and secretaries. A former Union minister echoed the sentiment, saying he didn’t expect ministers to give up their authority. “They’ve waited in the wings for ten years to grab at power,” he smirked. “Why would they let go even part of it?”

In its first ten days, the Modi sarkar promulgated an ordinance to facilitate the appointment of Nripendra Mishra, a retired bureaucrat, as the PM’s principal secretary. It also announced the scrapping of groups of ministers (GoMs) and empowered groups of ministers (EGoMs) meant for resolving tricky issues. It hinted at a six-day week at the Centre and indicated that a report was being compiled on the time spent by bureaucrats on golf. It gave a six-month extension to the cabinet secretary, ostensibly to enable a smooth transition, but effectively ruling out the next two in seniority, who would retire in the period. And the PMO appears poised to regain the power to post secretaries, taking away that freedom given by the UPA to ministers. It seems none of this had been discussed in the cabinet.


Before empowering the bureaucracy, says a cynical bureaucrat, it needs to become more efficient and responsive. All governments paid lip service to administrative reforms, but nothing has changed either at the Centre or in the states. One of the oldest in the world, the Indian bureaucracy is also rated as one of the worst. In a rating by 1,300 business executives, the Hong Kong-based Political & Economic Risk Consultancy (PERC) found it one of the “most stifling”, corrupt, inefficient and slow-moving. The overwhelming perception is that corrupt bureaucrats are despised but thrive; the honest are respected but do not rise; and idealists end up in the boondocks.

An example of how the bureaucracy functions was provided when cabinet secretary Ajit Seth reportedly sought a report on food inflation from the consumer affairs department days after the NDA stormed back to power. With inflation a highly volatile issue, one would have expected the department to have been monitoring it weekly, if not daily. But it seemed to require a change in government to trigger the routine action. Even more ironically, the department pulled out a three-year-old report by a committee chaired by Modi. Set up by Manmohan Singh, who had made Modi the chairman, the committee was tasked to suggest ways of improving the implementation of the Essential Commodities Act. It found that the states were indifferent to implementing existing laws to check hoarding and black marketing. There the matter rested.


The prime minister has his job cut out. He can either tame the bureaucracy or get tamed by it. Only time will tell if he has made a good beginning.

Shaking Up The Frame | Uttam Sengupta
 
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Heard Modi is scrapping AADHAAR- why the heck is he doing that??
Snooping by NSA and so on.

There were a lot of reservations right from the start, the IB warned the govt of info falling into the wrong hands but the govt never listened. The db used by the project is a modified mongoDB, the company is funded by the CIA, and the other companies involved are Accenture, which against was flagged a security threat as the CIA uses a lot of american companies to spy no people around the world. The congress govt decided to go ahead withthe project though, and now there is a risk of all that bio metric data falling into the wrong hands

I dont think it's been confirmed as of yet, but the IB has had a lot of reservations, and a few MPS from left parties are urging the PM to scrap it. IMO it is justified, the project itself is kinda screwed, lots of aliens have been granted these cards, and people selling cards for a price.
 
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Heard Modi is scrapping AADHAAR- why the heck is he doing that??


Probably misuse by illegal Bangladeshis was the issue.

AADHAR card is issued to all residents of India irrespective of their nationality ( including illegal Bangladeshis ) and could be later used to get Voter ID cards.

The funny fact is that AADAHR was not even required since Home ministry is already creating parallel database in form of National population registry with same characteristics as AADHAR but open only for Indian citizens.

:bad::bad::bad::bad:
If Rahul is Arjun then this time Pandavas will lose :sarcastic:
Arjun kaun hai phir ??? :D:D

@JanjaWeed ,@OrionHunter ,@Sidak @Tshering22


Looks like their Arjuna is currently Brihannala.
 
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@JanjaWeed i am getting fed up by hearing this NEW ARGUMENT of Congress.........literally clutching the straw............

BJP only got 31% VS :hitwall: :hitwall: :hitwall:

How much Congress got last time??????
hahaha.. they were accusing Modi & BJP of running a presidential kind of campaign.. & now they are using the same yardstick to judge the outcome.

Vote share doesn't mean much in a parliamentary system of democracy where you have 100s of regional parties & thousands of contestants. It will make sense only if the contest is one on one between two individuals in Presidential style of election!
 
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Arjun kaun hai phir ??? :D:D

@JanjaWeed ,@OrionHunter ,@Sidak @Tshering22
Hahaha.. look who is talking... sau chuhe khake billi haj ko chali! Comparing themselves with Pandavas after looting & ruining Hastinapur for the past 65 odd years!

btw.. Congress's Arjun is spending his time at Virat nagar for the moment as this vvv! :rofl:

Manmohan-Singh-Funny-Pictures-with-Rahul-Gandhi.jpg
 
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Heard Modi is scrapping AADHAAR- why the heck is he doing that??
Not possible,his economic advisers like panagaria and bhagwati are pro adhaar,he can add some this and that and make it his own project though !

Looks like a Rumour !
 
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Rajiv Pratap Rudy's speech in Parliament today was truly amazing. :D

The problem with Congress is not just that they have almost no nos.......

But they don't have ANY speakers, compare this to AJ, NaMo, Sushma, Ravi Shankar Prasad, Rajnath, etc. of BJP.
 
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