Looked at from one angle, the six months of Narendra Modi’s tenure may be a cause of disappointment for some.
Crowd of BJP supporters at Prime Minister Narendra Modiu00e2u0080u0099s election rally in Kishtwar. file pic
Looked at from one angle, the six months of Narendra Modi’s tenure may be a cause of disappointment for some. For the corporate sector, for instance, the absence of ‘big ticket’ reforms is bound to detract from the prime minister’s go-getter image. The business houses may not have said anything as yet about their dissatisfaction, but it is clear by now that Modi is not an ideologically-driven right-winger like Ronald Reagan or Margaret Thatcher.
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Crowd of BJP supporters at Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s election rally in Kishtwar. file pic
Instead, he evidently likes to pursue his own line at his own pace. He will not be hustled, therefore, into drafting a hire-and-fire labour reforms policy which is favoured by industrialists, nor into a return to land acquisition laws reminiscent of the 1894 rules which have now been scrapped.
What is more likely is that he will tweak these laws, including those on environment, and not opt for drastic changes. In this respect, Modi is a reformer, not a radical.
Any expectation, therefore, that his party’s majority in the Lok Sabha will make him ride roughshod over the existing rules and regulations, will not be fulfilled.
One reason why such dramatic changes have been expected since Modi appeared on the scene like a ‘rock star’, as even the foreign media describe him, is the pent-up frustration in the last years of the previous government. It was hoped, therefore, that Modi’s changes would be in the nature of a no-holds-barred recourses to a fast-growth path. Since this hasn’t been the case, the belief is that he is as much of a pragmatist who will not like to unnecessarily overturn the apple cart.
The prime minister is currently focussing on what can be deemed small things, such as toilets, cleanliness, e-governance, encouraging the underprivileged to open bank accounts and the celebrities as well as the MPs to ‘adopt’ villages.
There is also another kind of disappointment for some people with Modi. It is the result of the fact that there hasn’t yet been what Mani Shankar Aiyar called the “Godhra moment”. According to the former Congress MP, Modi is waiting for such an outbreak of communal violence to reveal his real self just as Hitler used the Reichstag fire to impose one-party rule on Germany.
Although the recent riots in Trilokpuri and the communal tension in Bawana on the outskirts of Delhi have been seen as examples of the local foot-soldiers of the saffron brigade fishing in troubled waters, there haven’t, mercifully, been any major incident.
What is more, the likes of Yogi Adityanath and Sakshi Maharaj have desisted — or have been prevented — from carrying on their earlier vicious propaganda on ‘love jehad’ in Maharashtra on the eve of the polls. It is not impossible that Modi is more serious about his proposed 10-year moratorium on sectarian animosity than what his hotheaded followers had assumed.
The BJP has indicated that it will go soft on the question of scrapping Article 370 of the Constitution which confers a special status on Jammu and Kashmir. Evidently, the hopes which the party entertains of scoring an unlikely victory in the impending assembly elections in Jammu and Kashmir have persuaded it to dilute one of the key items on its pro-Hindu agenda. Not only that, the BJP has even said that “Islam will prosper” under its rule, a claim which is likely to baffle both Hindus and Muslims, especially the bigoted among them. Modi has decided to follow a path of moderation.
That the country is advancing even in the economic sector is however evident from the projection of a 6.3 per cent growth rate next year by Morgan Stanley.
One reason why Modi’s first six months in office have been relatively trouble free is that the Congress not only continues to remain in the doldrums but also that its “internal tensions”, as Rahul Gandhi once said, have not subsided, as was evident from the virtual boycott of the party’s observance of Jawaharlal Nehru’s 125th birth anniversary by party stalwarts such as AK Antony, P Chidambaram, Sushil Kumar Shinde, Kamal Nath, Ghulam Nabi Azad and others.
Amulya Ganguli is a political analyst. The views expressed are personal. He can be reached at amulyaganguli@gmail.com
The views expressed in this column are the individual’s and don’t represent those of the paper.