Commentary/Ashok Mitra
Principles be hanged, ordinances are forever
Why not admit it? A homogeneous collective memory for the nation
spanning different generations is attractive as a concept; it
does not, however, have any credible empirical correlates.
The
saga of the struggle for Independence is of
zero interest to the younger generations who now constitute the
nation's overwhelming majority. School children are made to negotiate
synoptic biographies of Mahatma Gandhi, Abdul
Kalam Azad, Jawaharlal Nehru and others as part of their curriculum.
Much of these narratives have a superficial context, with emphasis
on the role individuals filled in the freedom movement; issues
that exercised the public mind in those halcyon days have receded
into deep oblivion.
Only a handful will remember after this interval of 50 years that one of the major planks in the charter of demands
articulated by leaders as well as the masses following them during
the period between the two World Wars was resistance to the frequent
promulgation of ordinances by the British rulers. Subjugation
to foreign power was a wretchedly demeaning experience. It meant
rule by fiats and decrees.
Even when morsels of power were granted
to legislative bodies to pass statutes in such areas as education
and local self-government, ordinances continued to be an integral
part of administrative functioning. Howsoever nonrepresentative
the character of these elected bodies were under the Raj, and howsoever
narrow the orbit of subjects they were permitted to deal with,
legislative proposals mooted in the form of bills provided a prior
opportunity to discuss the objectives motivating them.
Half a century is long enough time to forget the pledges of the
freedom movement. The change of mood in fact started early,
alongside the change of guard. The Constitution enacted
in 1949 incorporated enthusiastically in its text a number of
provisions from the Government of India Act, 1935; the prerogative
of the executive wing to issue ordinances -- when
Parliament or legislatures of states and Union territories were
not in session and an imperative necessity arose to enlarge the
administration's statutory powers -- was accorded formal recognition
through Articles 123 and 239B.
The reasons proffered for this
deviation from the promises the nation had entered into with itself
during the freedom movement were little different from what the
colonial masters were wont to spout. Instances abound of many
countries round the world which have refused to write into their
Constitution the provision for Emergency ordinances. They have
nonetheless survived and prospered.
The contrast in our case is glaring; ordinances are threatening
to become standard surrogate procedure for enacting fresh legislation.
Parliament with its seemingly searching ways is being increasingly
considered as an as-far-as-possible-to-be avoided nuisance. Non-democratic
iron has entered the administration's soul. A distinct pattern
of executive behaviour has, therefore, emerged -- dillydally with
the legislative proposals, wait for Parliament to rise and then
rush to Rashtrapati Bhavan to persuade the poor President to issue
umpteen ordinances one after another.
True, these have
to be vetted by Parliament before the expiry of six weeks after it reassembles. But once the ordinances are promulgated, it
turns out to be a different kind of ball game. The very fact that
the ordinances would lapse at the end of six weeks following the
reassembly of Parliament, is turned into a plea to rush through
the legislation without too much questioning the
rationale behind it.
The government's prestige is laid on the line, and Parliament
chooses to retreat even when hardly any ground exists for not
challenging the credentials of an ordinance. There was the curious
case last year of an ordinance issued to set up for the first
time in the country a public depository system to strengthen the
base of stock exchange activities.
Legislation to substitute the
ordinance by statue was presented to Parliament after an interval
of almost six months from the date of its promulgation. Not a
single public depository, it was discovered, had started functioning
in the intervening period, so much so that the ordinance might
as well have been done without.
Bad habits have a tendency to entrench themselves. The two months
between the close of the last winter session of Parliament and
the commencement of the Budget session provided a golden opportunity for the government to misbehave. It squeezed through as many as
19 ordinances in the course of those 60 days.
At least one minister
exploded into righteous indignation when it was pointed out that
this practice of legislation by ordinance was an insult to the
memory of the heroes who participated in the Independence movement.
The minister, a post-midnight child, did not see the point: what
have the compulsions of administrative expediency to do with the
buffoonery our grandfathers used to indulge in?
It never rains but pours. The Election Commission, which is supposed
to preside over the nation's suffrage, has furnished the latest
example of the prevalent ethos in official circles -- principles
be hanged, ordinances are for ever. A great number of 'non-serious'
candidates, the EC is concerned, may enter the Presidential fray , now barely a few weeks away. This they
will do by taking advantage of the fact that the security deposits
required for contesting the poll is an inordinately small amount. Something, EC officials think, needs
to be done immediately about it.
Parliament is not in session,
so what would be more just
and proper but persuade the President to proclaim
an ordinance which would raise by a hefty amount the security
deposit? Such a measure
would definitely shut the door to bogus candidates.
It is a sad commentary to make but has to be made; no congratulations
are due to the Commission on its depth of thinking.
Even if it were to fix the security amount at Rs 100,000 or more, the purpose it has in mind would hardly be accomplished,
for economic liberalisation has reared an affluent set to whom
such money would not even cover a morning's idle pastime -- quite
a crowd might still be tempted to invest this to-them-piffling
sum to gain the public prominence which Presidential poll would
guarantee. Only the non-rich non-serious candidates would be weeded
out by the EC's fiat.
The class bias in its approach could not
be more overt: Frivolousness on the part of the poor, it has ordained,
deserves to be disciplined, but not that of the rich.
Leave that point aside. Even if the EC was justified
to make an issue of the quantum of deposit money, it has not the
flimsiest excuse to seek the promulgation of an ordinance for
the purpose. It had plenty of time at its disposal to deliberate
on the matter. In the light of the conclusions it arrived at,
it could have prepared the necessary documentation justifying
an amendment to the statue governing the procedure and forwarded its proposal to the government.
It did not
have to wait for the Parliament to be adjourned before the bright
idea occurred to it.
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