The joint declaration of this meeting made it absolutely clear that this people's yearning for relief can only be met by an alternative policy trajectory. As far as the economic policy direction and corruption are concerned, people see little difference, rightly so, between the BJP and the Congress. Additionally, the BJP, acting as the political arm of the RSS, continues to sharpen communal polarisation through the pursuit of its hardcore Hindutva agenda. Thus, any alternative policy trajectory in the country can only come about through a political alternative that will necessarily have to be a non-Congress, non-BJP combination.
The meeting of the non-Congress, non-BJP secular parties and the joint declaration is in accordance with the understanding that the CPI (M) arrived at, at its 20th Congress.
The possibility of the emergence of such a political alternative has put a spoke in the wheels of those who are not only comfortable with the political bipolarity but see in such a bipolarity a "win-win" situation. A division of all political parties with the BJP as one pole and the Congress as the other suits all vested interests because all their objectives converge with either of this pole holding the reins of the central government, whether it be the pursuit of economic policies that would ensure profit maximisation or the patronage provided for the unfettered growth of "crony capitalism" based on large-scale corruption.
At the media conference, there were many questions. While a large number were genuinely seeking answers to the concrete form and shape that such an alternative will take and the content of its programme, most questions reflected both the anger and anguish that the comfortable applecart of bipolarity was being disrupted. Upon being asked as to who is the likely prime ministerial candidate of such an alternative, the leaders told the media persons that the structure of Indian parliamentary democracy was such that the prime minister can only be elected by those members of parliament who are first elected by the people. Mulayam Singh Yadav reminded them that from Morarji Desai to V P Singh to Deve Gowda, I K Gujral, Atal Behari Vajpayee and Manmohan Singh - such was India's history. Upon being asked as to what is the seat-sharing agreement between the parties, they were informed that these would be finalised at the state level, based on the concrete realities there. Media persons were reminded that on all occasions in India's parliamentary history, all coalition governments starting from the 1977 Janata Party government, the coalitions took, both a concrete shape and a name, only post elections. This was the case with the Vajpayee-led National Democratic Alliance and the Manmohan Singh-led United Progressive Alliance as well. Hence, 2014 would be no different.
India Inc and their mentors, international finance capital, appear very worried at such a prospect which is likely to upset their expectations of greater profit maximisation at the expense of the Indian people. The corporate media is not far behind in this context. Few days ago, the Left held a Haryana level people's rally for a political alternative at Hissar. On the same day, the AAP held a rally, called much after the Left rally announcement, at Rohtak. The latter was widely covered by the corporate media while the former was hardly mentioned notwithstanding larger participation. This is not surprising. Earlier, when Anna Hazare's anti-corruption movement was on in the capital, over 200,000 workers organised by the Central Trade Unions had converged at the Parliament Street against corruption and price rise. While the former hogged 24/7 media coverage, the latter hardly found any mention.
Speaking of Anna Hazare, many find it strange that he has now chosen to be the cheer leader of West Bengal's Trinamool Congress. Sad, that someone like Anna, with his "moral uprightness" and championing of honesty in public affairs should be seen openly cheering a party whose government in West Bengal has established a record of reducing the state as the rape capital of India and whose government has been admonished by the High Court for openly harbouring criminal elements, leave alone corrupt ones.
Recently, the Rajya Sabha was informed that nearly Rs 6 lakh-crore was the tax foregone, mainly from corporate and income tax, in 2013. Such voluntary non-collection of taxes in 2013 come on the top of similar amounts of tax foregone in the last few years. These are nothing but straight-forward subsidies for the rich. Instead of subsidising the rich, if these monies are used for public investments, we can have a much better "inclusive" growth trajectory.
Edited excerpts from an editorial in CPI (M) publication People's Democracy edition dated March 2, 2014