Commentary/Vir Sanghvi
Kesri is not a person who lays too much emphasis on scruple
When Sitaram Kesri did his calculations,
he probably didn't bother
with any conception of morality. He simply concentrated on trying
to get the numbers required to become prime minister.
This has proved to be his undoing. Over the last two months, he
has given the impression of being a man who will do anything to
get ahead. The manner in which he betrayed Narasimha Rao, his
cynical use of Manmohan Singh (he suggested he would replace Rao
as CPP leader and then grabbed the job for himself) and his expulsion
of former Punjab chief minister Harcharan Singh Brar while he lay
on his hospital bed, all suggest that
Kesri is not a person who lays too much emphasis on scruple.
Worse still, he has sent out the signal that he only wants Deve
Gowda to go so that he can become prime minister himself. He has
not even bothered to find a moderately convincing ideological
justification or framed his opposition to the government in terms
of issues.
To put it blandly: You can't be so openly greedy and still hope
to persuade people that you are prime ministerial material. Over
the last few years, the minimum standard for prime ministership
has been lowered considerably. But even so, the Indian people
still look for some kind of moral core.
That, alas, is the test that Kesri has flunked. If Deve Gowda
continues to act like a regional chieftain and not as a prime
minister then the same sort of thing is true of Kesri. He does
not realise that the behaviour that might have been acceptable
in a party treasurer, in the Congress president's munim, is not
acceptable from the president himself. And it is certainly not
worthy of a putative prime minister.
The second question -- about what will happen next -- is almost
impossible to answer.
After the Punjab debacle and the by election defeats, Kesri is
in trouble. There may well be nothing in the Dr Tanwar case but
those who keep raising the issue have succeeded in doing what
Kesri needs least - focusing attention on his moral core.
Already, there is speculation within the Congress that Kesri will
not find it easy to get elected president this summer when organisational
elections are due unless he manages to become prime minister by
then. He may have to devise a power-sharing formula with somebody
like Sharad Pawar, otherwise.
But while the future of the Congress and its interim president
is hard to predict, it is easier to be forthright about his government.
Basically, it can't last.
It lacks credibility in the eyes of the people and its ministers
remain unknowns, several months after they took office. Nor can
its internal contradictions keep it going beyond a point.
Had Kesri not been to greedy, the government would have toppled
itself and he would have picked up the pieces.
By the end of the year, the government -- in its present form --
will cease. It could be replaced by a Congress government or perhaps, the Congress will join
the ruling coalition. If neither of those two options works, then
we are headed for another election.
For Kesri himself, the best course would be to keep his mouth
shut, zip up his greed and adopt a low profile. Nobody is going
to make him prime minister out of choice. But if Deve Gowda goes
wrong -- as he probably will -- then the Congress should position
itself so that it can grab power.
And who knows? Another accident of history may benefit Kesri as
it did Deve Gowda and Narasimha Rao!
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