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India’s democratic pageant

third eye

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India’s democratic pageant | Expert Zone

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Last week, India’s independent Election Commission announced the dates for the next general election. The world’s largest single exercise of the democratic franchise will take place over a staggering 37 days in nine “phases,” some a week apart, from April 7 to May 12. Some 814 million eligible voters will elect, for the 16th time, a new parliament and government, casting their ballots at more than 930,000 polling stations — after choosing from an estimated 15,000 candidates belonging to more than 500 political parties.

Democracy, of course, is a process, not an event. But India’s elections — with their outsize logistical and security challenges, myriad languages, and candidates identified not just by name but also by electoral symbols to aid illiterate voters — are events that evoke admiration each time they occur.

It takes a sizeable forest to furnish enough paper for posters, electoral rolls, and ballots. And the thousands of electronic voting machines that are manufactured in India can survive heat, dust, and power failures — and retain their results safely until the votes are ready to be counted, sometimes weeks later. (Because no votes are counted until the last ones are cast, counting day is May 16.) Moreover, every election has at least one story of officials battling through snow or jungle to ensure that the preferences of remote constituents are duly recorded.

Yet there are larger issues behind the electoral spectacle that must not be overlooked. India’s elections have, over the years, deepened and broadened the composition of the political establishment. Sociologists have analyzed the class composition of India’s legislatures and traced the change from a post-independence Parliament dominated by highly educated professionals to one populated by today’s motley crew of MPs, who are more truly representative of India’s rural heartland.

But the fact that, particularly in India’s northern states, voters elect people referred to openly in the press as “mafia dons,” “dacoit leaders,” and “anti-social elements” is a troubling reflection on the way the electoral process has served Indian democracy. In the last four parliaments, at least a hundred members have had criminal cases pending against them. The resulting alienation of the educated middle class means that fewer and fewer of them go to the polls on Election Day.

The poor, however, do. Whereas psephological studies in the United States have demonstrated that the poor do not vote in significant numbers (presidential-election turnout in Harlem averaged 23% before Barack Obama’s two candidacies), the opposite is true in India.

In India, it is the poor who take the time to line up in the hot sun, believing that their votes will make a difference, whereas more privileged voters, knowing that their views and numbers will do little to influence the outcome, have been staying at home. Studies of Indian elections have consistently shown that the poorest vote in numbers well above the national average, while the educated middle-class turn out in numbers well below it.

The significant changes in the social composition of India’s politicians and bureaucrats since Independence are indeed proof of democracy at work. But many lament that the poor performance of the country’s political class in general offers less cause for celebration.

India’s parliamentarians increasingly embody the qualities required to acquire power rather than the skills needed to wield it for the common good. Many cynics regard democracy in India as a process that has given free rein to criminals and corrupt cops, opportunists and fixers, murderous musclemen and grasping middlemen, kickback-making politicos and bribe-taking bureaucrats, mafia dons and private armies, caste activists and religious extremists.

And yet it is democracy that has given Indians of every imaginable caste, creed, culture, and cause the chance to break free of their lot. Where there is social oppression and caste tyranny, particularly in rural India, democracy offers the victims a means of salvation. Among the victors in recent elections have been people from traditionally underprivileged backgrounds who have risen through the power of the ballot to positions their forefathers could never have dreamed of. There could be no more startling tribute to the Indian system.

Yes, elections also allow many to vent extreme views. There are those who wish for India to become a Hindu Rashtra, a land of and for the Hindu majority; those who wish to raise even higher the protectionist barriers against foreign investment that have started to come down; and those who believe that a firm hand at the national helm would be preferable to the failures of democracy.

As the victors in May cobble together a government, their challenge will be to sustain a pluralist India of competing ideas and interests, unafraid of the power or products of the outside world, and determined to liberate and fulfill its people’s creative energies. I have little doubt that the democratic process will ensure inclusiveness rather than fragmentation. The only possible idea of India is that of a nation greater than the sum of its parts.

In India, as elsewhere, there will always be a choice between a world of edicts and crusades, where orthodoxies rule and foreign heresies are ruthlessly suppressed, and a world in which the virtues of tolerance, dissent, and cooperation are recognized and practiced. As it goes to the polls, India, with a sixth of the world’s population, should offer an instructive example of the latter.
 
Last week, India’s independent Election Commission announced the dates for the next general election. The world’s largest single exercise of the democratic franchise will take place over a staggering 37 days in nine “phases,” some a week apart, from April 7 to May 12. Some 814 million eligible voters will elect, for the 16th time, a new parliament and government, casting their ballots at more than 930,000 polling stations — after choosing from an estimated 15,000 candidates belonging to more than 500 political parties.

Democracy, of course, is a process, not an event. But India’s elections — with their outsize logistical and security challenges, myriad languages, and candidates identified not just by name but also by electoral symbols to aid illiterate voters — are events that evoke admiration each time they occur.

The world's largest democratic election.... that is truly an amazing feat. :cheers:

The logistical challenges alone are mind-boggling. You should see how hard it is to run elections in my city of HK with only 7 million people.

According to India's recent polls, it seems the Indian population are voting on the basis of "development" again, this seems like a very good trend.
 
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That is truly an amazing feat. :cheers:

The logistical challenges alone are mind-boggling. You should see how hard it is to run elections in my city of HK with only 7 million people.

According to India's recent polls, it seems the Indian population are voting on the basis of "development" again, this seems like a very good trend.

Yes , development , progress , jobs ,infrastructure and above all Corruption etc are the issues that the voter guages candidates on and votes for.

Sure there are & will be cases villages vote collectively one way or another but by & large the votes is very perceptive & he loves change.

Parties like AAP have further sensitised the voter and he now demands answers.
 
That is truly an amazing feat. :cheers:

The logistical challenges alone are mind-boggling. You should see how hard it is to run elections in my city of HK with only 7 million people.

According to India's recent polls, it seems the Indian population are voting on the basis of "development" again, this seems like a very good trend.
Hats off to the Election Commission of India to handle more than 800 million voters. Since the last election more than 100 million voters have been added.

It is the biggest logistical exercise ever and we are proud to do it in a free and fair manner
 
Yes , development , progress , jobs ,infrastructure and above all Corruption etc are the issues that the voter guages candidates on and votes for.

Sure there are & will be cases villages vote collectively one way or another but by & large the votes is very perceptive & he loves change.

Parties like AAP have further sensitised the voter and he now demands answers.

I feel that India right now would benefit from a leadership that is strong enough to conduct truly systemic and deep-rooted reforms of the Indian administrative and economic system, with the objective of increasing efficiency and effectiveness. Regardless of the "vested interests" that would oppose such a move. A Deng Xiaoping type of leader.

I believe that there is a leader in India right now, who could do exactly that... though I will not mention them by name in this thread for the sake of neutrality.
 
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I feel that India right now would benefit from a leadership that is strong enough to conduct truly systemic and deep-rooted reforms of the Indian administrative and economic system, with the objective of increasing efficiency and effectiveness. Regardless of the "vested interests" that would oppose such a move. A Deng Xiaoping type of leader.

I believe that there is a leader in India right now, who could do exactly that... though I will not mention them by name in this thread for the sake of neutrality.

Yes

Deng did not have constitutional organised opposition parties to deal with.He decided right & pushed it through.

I dont care which party comes to power in this elections so long as it comes with an absolute majority.
 
Yes

Deng did not have constitutional organised opposition parties to deal with.He decided right & pushed it through.

I dont care which party comes to power in this elections so long as it comes with an absolute majority.

You are right. They need a big enough political mandate for reform.

Deng Xiaoping's struggle was slightly different, due to the differing nature of our political system. He was purged twice during the Cultural revolution, and even his own son was thrown out of a window by Red Guards. He had powerful enemies everywhere, but he eventually outsmarted them all.

So he did struggle a lot, just not in the same way. I fear that India's system will be very difficult to reform unless one party gets a very strong mandate.
 
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