Its time to go Mr Prime Minister

Dear Prime Minister,

In Hindu tradition and culture the concept of renunciation has always been valued more than the idea of acquisition, and even though you may not accept this for fear of offending your party’s minority vote bank, let me allay your fears by reminding you that this is something preached by the Abrahamic religions also.

I would, therefore, urge you to seriously consider this option in your own interest as well as in the larger interest of this unfortunate country.

 

The government headed by you has already taken the country back to 1990 in sheer economic terms, and in terms of other social and public values we have reached the nadir of the Dark Ages.

 

The country had great hopes from you when it voted you to power in 2004, and even higher expectations when it renewed your mandate in 2009 after your sterling display of vision and courage in the nuclear deal. But you only flattered to deceive, and for reasons which are now becoming obvious, relinquished any pretense of leadership or governance.

A big ship needs a strong hand at the rudder-your hand- but you have handed it over to a motley crew of rank opportunists and faceless lascars who can only run it aground.

You were never a politician- a positive for most of the voters – and the two qualities that made us repose our trust in you were your honesty and your acknowledged status as an eminent economist. Today, both lie in tatters- you have betrayed our trust, not substantially but wholly, and therefore you must go.

Time to go Mr Prime Minister
Time to go Mr Prime Minister

Honesty is not divisible, and for those who exercise power there can be no nuances between personal honesty and public honesty. A person who allows others to loot cannot be honest. A Manager who does not raise his voice when illegalities are being committed by his subordinates cannot be honest.

 

A law maker who protects criminals cannot be honest. And a Prime Minister who does all this simply to remain in power cannot be honest. Your honesty has already cost the country dearly, Mr. Prime Minister, and we cannot sustain this cost any longer.

 

Your reputation as an economist may still follow you to Harvard or to the LSE after your retirement, but in this country its devaluation is proportionate to the devaluation of the Indian rupee. Where did you lose the plot?

You had everything going for you when you took over in 2004– an economy growing at 8-9%, a Current Account SURPLUS of US$ 10.56 billion, Foreign Exchange reserves in excess of US$ 400 billion, a comfortable net INFLOW of Foreign Direct Investment.

After nine years of your being at the helm, the growth rate is down to between 5% and 6% and falling, the Current Account has gone into a DEFICIT of US$ 20 billion and increasing, Foreign Exchange reserves are down to seven months’ import and depleting, the Fiscal Deficit is going to hit 6%, Foreign Exchange reserves are down to US $ 200 billions (with repayments of US$ 150 due before March 2014), there is a net OUTFLOW of FDI funds to the tune of almost US$ 7-10 billions every month.

The Rupee has reached an exchange rate of 65 to the dollar. Nobody believes Mr. Chidambaram anymore, the RBI Governor can only hyper-ventilate, and you, of course, continue to maintain your sphinx-like silence.

In the meantime inflation continues unabated, jobs are being lost by the millions ( unemployment actually rose by 2% between July 2011 and June 2012), Indian industry prefers to take its money abroad, infrastructure projects languish somewhere between Messers Jaiswal, Jyotiraditya Scindia and Montek Singh Ahluwalia, and a litre of cooking oil now costs more than two litres of beer! (Can you imagine, Mr. Prime Minister, what a field day Marie Antoinette would have had with this?!).

And this is at the precise time when the rest of the world is coming out of its downturn! No, sir, you and your band of forty thieves have been so busy with your petty politicking, with ensuring the survival of a particular dynasty, securing the financial well being of future generations of your party colleagues and allies, dividing communities and classes, that you have had no time for planning and taking decisions.

The only decisions you HAVE taken boggle the mind. We are already spending 75000 crores every year on our Public Distribution System: every single survey indicates that at least 40% of this, or 30000 crores is siphoned off by politicians, bureaucrats and middle-men. And now your govt. is determined to pour another 50000 crores into this bottomless pit through the Food Security Act! What for?

The BPL( Below Poverty Line) families and the Antyodaya (poorest of the poor) families are already covered under the existing PDS-the FSA will make no difference to them. Govt.’s own figures state that only 27% of our population is now below the poverty line; why then do you want to bring 67% of the population under the FSA, and spend a whopping 50000 crore on people who do not deserve this largesse?

And that too at a time when you have no money for infrastructure development or health and education( in both of which we now lag behind even Sri Lanka and Bangladesh!). Is it worth destroying a country just so your motley crew can win another election? Is this honesty, Mr. Prime Minister?

Had it been only the economic downturn we could perhaps have been more generous. For economics, as we all know, is not only a dismal science, it is also an uncertain one: as they say, even if one were to lay down all economists end to end, we still wouldn’t reach a conclusion!

After all, if Mr. Amartya Sen and Mr. Bhagwati cannot agree on what is good for India we can hardly expect you to have the answer. No sir, the economics is only a part of the mess: let me recount what the others are.

You have systematically sought to destroy every fibre of the democratic fabric of this nation. Constitutional authorities have been attacked publicly by your minions and sought to be humiliated at every turn: remember the diatribes against Vinod Rai and the Central Information Commissioner?

Statutory authorities like the CBI and the office of the Attorney General have been subverted and made to fall in line, your party’s line. Your oath of office demanded that you protect them, but you remained mute, as is your wont.

You have even done the unthinkable: set the Intelligence Bureau against the CBI, ensuring for ever that our premier intelligence agency will never cooperate with our premier criminal investigating agency- every terrorist, insurgent and crooks of all assorted types must be lining up outside Teksons to buy ” thank you” cards for you!

Such is your hubris that you have shown contempt for the orders of the Supreme Court even. The Court’s judgments, instead of being respected and seen as a matter for serious contemplation, are publicly criticised and sought to be by-passed by the collation of a consensus of those affected by the judgments (!) and a brute legislative majority.

So criminals can continue in Parliament. Merit will find no place in the selection of Doctors (at the senior most, Professor, level) even in Super specialty disciplines; minorities will get reservations in government jobs even though the Constitution forbids it.

This lack of respect for the final arbiter of the Constitution and the law is not only breeding a competitive defiance of the Court among other political parties but is also setting the stage for a show down with the judiciary a-la Pakistan and other banana republics.

You behave as if the Opposition is not part of the democratic process, that it is a nuisance that is best ignored; consequently, all communication between the two has now snapped, and the nation is a helpless witness to a Parliament that resembles a rugby locker room in both language and action and is in a permanent state of adjournment.

All parties are to blame for this, of course, but it is your party which laid down the rules of engagement. By refusing to walk the extra mile to accommodate even the legitimate demands of the Opposition, and by sabotaging time and again the Committees of Parliament, you have eviscerated this vital organ of democracy which under you has become as vestigious and irrelevant as your appendix.

Practically no legislative work has been done in the last two years: there are 116 bills pending in both Houses, of which 19 and 21 relate to financial and educational reforms, respectively, two of the areas that need immediate attention.

But your lack of concern is matched only by your shocking sense of priorities: instead of trying to push these bills, you have instead chosen to concentrate your fading energies on two other amendments that can only make politics murkier and more criminalised: removing the disqualification of convicted legislators, and exempting political parties from the RTI Act!

Perhaps the biggest price for your incompetence and your colleagues’ venality is being paid by our defense forces: all three are many years behind in terms of armaments and weaponry ( because another ” honest” Minister, Mr. Antony, will neither effect purchases from abroad nor allow FDI in defense production) and their very capacity to defend the country has been seriously eroded.

Who will defend our borders in such a scenario, Mr. Prime Minister- the lethal barbs of Mr. Manish Tewari, or the boomerangs of Mr. Digvijay Singh or the IEDs of Mr. Mani Shankar Iyer? Even worse, you have demoralized our armed forces by the constant interference of your Ministry and completely taken away their operational and tactical independence.

A succession of retired Army commanders have said so in recent times and the pusillanimous approach of our troops in response to violations of the LOC testify to this. (Of course, these same Army Commanders who have suddenly found their conscience and their voice also need to explain why they didn’t defend their operational independence more vigorously when they were enjoying the perks of their office!).

Under you we have become a whining nation- we whine when Pakistani troops shoot our soldiers, we whine when Chinese troops camp on our territory for weeks on end, we whine when Italian marines shoot our sailors, we whine when the Sri Lanka navy arrests our fishermen, we whine when our ex-President is frisked at an American airport.

Under you a once-proud nation is being kicked around by even a Maldives or a Bhutan. What in God’s name have you done to our image?

In communal terms we have always been a fractured society. But true leaders have in the past tried to bridge these fissures. To you, however, will go the dubious credit of widening and deepening these cracks between communities and castes.

In order to survive, your party has countenanced the retrograde decisions of allies that can only raise the confrontational pitch: earmarking of state budgets for a religious minority, reservations in jobs for the same community (which goes against the express provisions of our Constitution), reservations in promotions (which has been struck down by the courts), setting up of a central Commission to review the (criminal) cases of suspects of one community only.

It is your party which has put communalism at the center of the campaign for next year’s election, not the BJP or Mr. Modi. The former has consciously downplayed the Ram Mandir issue, and Modi had made it clear that development was going to be his plank. But this did not suit you since your party couldn’t possibly debate him on this plank, what with your miserable record of the last five years.

So you deliberately inserted the communal element, as did your allies, by harping only on the 2002 Gujarat riots. To his credit, Mr. Modi has so far not agreed to stoop so low, and I do not think your strategy will work.

But you have in the process vitiated the atmosphere for a long time to come, reopened old wounds that were beginning to heal, and provided a legitimate space for hot heads on both sides of the divide.

How much damage to the country is one Parliamentary seat worth, Mr. Prime Minister? How many more Partitions will you recreate to satisfy your party’s lust for power?

Your opportunistic creation of Telangana has sown the seeds of disputes and blood-letting in all parts of the country that will sorely test the federal integrity of our country for many years to come. There are twenty one more statehood specters waiting in the wings and by the time they are exorcised we may have ceased to exist as one nation.

Do I need to refer to the endemic corruption that your government has been indulging in these last ten years? And to your pathetic attempts to distance yourself from them, even though it is gradually becoming clearer with each passing day that you were aware of what was happening and did nothing to stop it? Why?

The quality of honesty, like that of mercy, cannot be strained: one cannot be honest and yet knowingly allow dishonesty on one’s watch.

Even worse, your increasing brazenness in the face of evidence against you boggles the mind: the Minister who doctored the Coalgate report has been made Special Envoy to Japan, a Minister whose nephew sold posts in The Railways for crores has not even been named in the charge sheet, the Minister on whose watch files relating to YOUR period of the coal scam have gone missing continues to bestride Shastri Bhavan like a colossus.

Who is this Faustian devil you have sold your soul to, Mr. Prime Minister?

Your deafening silence on all these matters-you have spoken in both houses of Parliament only fifty times in ten years-defies logic and conventional wisdom. And that leads me to speculate whether we are underestimating you.

Is there, after all, a method in your madness? Could it be that you are reconciled to losing the next elections and are therefore deliberately implementing a scorched earth policy?

That you will leave behind as a legacy for the next government an India that is bankrupt, ungovernable, riven by caste and communal conflicts, all its institutions destroyed?

An India that will soon be on its knees, begging for your party- the lone horseman riding in from the sunset, in Mr. Rahul Gandhi’s words, don’t forget-to take over the reins again, and save the country from perdition? But I forget, you never speak- so we’ll never know till the horseman is upon us.

Mr. Prime Minister, your party has stripped this country like a cloud of locusts. You have sown every type of poisonous seed known to your ilk and we shall be reaping the bitter harvest for many years hence. You have engendered an atmosphere of uncertainty,venality, indecision, communalism, opportunism, criminalisation and defiance of constitutional and statutory institutions which cannot be allowed to continue, for that way lies certain disaster.

Elections are nine months’ hence but we cannot allow this conception to come to full term: the seed sown by you can only destroy this country and must be aborted. The time has come for you to go, Mr. Prime Minister, and to go immediately.

Call for elections now, end the uncertainty, let us get on with our lives, give this country a chance to redeem itself. Do one last service to this nation, sir- stand not upon the order of your going, but go!

 

 

With best wishes,

your’s sincerely,

A VOTING STATISTIC

 

Join the Conversation

70 Comments

  1. says: Anit Gopinath

    As said in the article, a person who shields the dishones and corrupt has to be corrupt and dishonest himself. There is no two ways about it. This Man Manmohan Singh has shown how the highest post of responsibility and trust can be vandalied ! He is the worst villain !He has not stepped down even after hirst worst atrocities were exposed. That shows he is power hungry ! He has to be kicked out. That is the only option now !

  2. says: Vayodhika

    An article cannot be more explicit and to the point.Nothing our great PM has failed to do to ruin this country has been overlooked.
    There is great fear lurking in the minds of our citizens to write any thing against our Gvernment.

  3. says: Uma

    Crystal clear & explicit. But to what avail are a few such minds & views against the massive flow of caste, religion & dole bases voting masses?

  4. says: Ravi Kapur

    Manmohan Singh appears to be responsible for all this because he is sitting on the “Chair” – renounced by Sonia Gandhi because if she had accepted the “Chair”, the internal feud in Congress Party would have spelled the doom for itself. Therefore, a “dummy/puppet” was proposed – strings being controlled through Sonia and her coterie. And as trained by Manmohan’s mentor – the “Mauni Baba” (Narsimha Rao) in whose Prime Ministerial Regime, Manmohan brought in the World Bank policies/mandate (at the back of which is the USA who pulls all the strings at World Bank) in which the other World Bank trained economist who has been the Planning Commission Chief for soooo long helped him and the duo have just been playing in the hands of the background-forces enjoying/biding their time.

    Why the present “Mauni Baba” (Manmohan Singh) does not have courage to leave the chair is surprising and needs to be explored

  5. says: M G WARRIER

    The identity, “A VOTING STATISTIC” conveys more than what the writer might have intended. Generally, the new generation has no respect for the ‘voter’. If you need evidence, ask new RBI Governor Dr raghuram Rajan. The day he took over, he has announced that he will not do anything to poll votes or get ‘Facebook likes’.

  6. says: Gian

    Sir Winston Churchill was right when predicted: “Power will go to the hands of rascals, freebooters; All Indian leaders will be low caliber & men of straw. They will have sweet tongues and silly hearts. They will fight amongst themselves for power and India will be lost in political squabbles. A day will come when even air water would be taxed in India.”
    INDIANS HAVE WORKED VERY HARD TO PROVE HIM RIGHT!!

  7. says: Shashi

    Mr Shukla

    I read this article along with your earlier ones on this site. As many others responding to your article has indicated, you have said enough to provoke reflection and analysis of the situation we are in. To that extent they are well written and substantiated.

    While I am no admirer or the congress or their despicable bunch of current leaders, I am still not ready to accept that BJP amd Modi as the answer. Your previous articles, particularly the one on why you support Modi, raises my anxiety level to a point where I start to question your objectivity. After starting off quite well with grounded facts, you get into a rambling defense of rabid Hindutva. And even more disturbing is the defense of Modi for the Godhra riots. You absolve him of any complicity. As an ex bureaucrat, you have had front-seat experience of how CMs can steer the enforcement of law and order. If you are suggesting that the “excellent administrator” in Modi could not do enough to prevent the massacre, you are either delusional or mischievous. He is a dangerous sociopath and you know that.

    You may be sick and tired where the congress is taking this country. I am for sure. I want them out. But I am not so desperate that I start seeing a saint in Modi. Or start beating the drums of Hindutva. I am a Hindu, but am ashamed of the rabidness with which we are asserting our hegemony. If Muslims and Christians did the wrong thing for the last 600 years, that doesnt make it right for Hindu to do the same.

    1. says: Sriram

      @Shashi-For how long will you keep flogging Godhra?? Why do you not mention that it was the torching of a train compartment in which more than sixty people were charred to death which sparked it.And what about the shameful and despicable pogrom against the Sikhs conducted by Congress goons post-Indira Gandhi’s death? Why is noone talking about that? Fact is the MMS, the Congress party, the Gandhi family complete with their basket of ‘mango and banana’ parasites must all go. The sooner the so-called ‘liberal’ jhola wala brigade accepts this the better.

    2. says: Avay Shukla

      Sashi, you do me an injustice! I have nowhere said that Modi is a saint- in fact I have specifically stated the opposite. I have not exonerated him from any culpability in the riots-I have stated that this is premature and inconclusive. As far as doing ” enough to prevent the massacre” is concerned,any fair minded person without media inspired preconceptions would have to admit that he had done much better than any other Chief Minister in a similar predicament: he had the Army out on the streets in 24 hours, his police shot more than 100 rioters, he even asked other state CMs for additional police( They were all Congress worthies and all of them refused, including the judgemental Digvijay Singh in MP). More people have been convicted and sentenced in these riots in Gujarat than perhaps in all other riots since independence combined.He has proven his administrative qualities in more ways than one.You are certainly entitled to your views on Hindutva, as am I- and I am done with apologising for being a Hindu in a Hindu country. And finally,while one should always aspire for the ideal, if that’s not possible, one should settle for the best of the given lot rather than just give up or turn sceptical. I admit that we could have done better than Modi as PM- we could have done with a Nehru or a Sardar Patel or a Shastri. Do you see them around?

        1. says: Mitul

          Absolutely nailed it.

          Based on the administrative capabilities and the vision he has for youth, and the growth that he has got in Gujarat, I think he is on right path and taking the country youth on right path.

      1. says: Rajinikanth

        Dear Mr. Shukla,

        Like others have said, you nailed it. I only wish more retired folks like you speak out and have their views expresses in the news media. More importantly the regional news media that tends to be less biased. What we need are verifiable facts that people can then decide who to support.

        The BJP needs to be more proactive to clearly separate itself from anti-Muslim attitudes at the party level and at the personal level. It is understandable that there is anti-Muslim feelings at a personal level.

        For instance I interact with many Muslims and have Muslim friends. I had Muslim neighbors growing up with whom I played cricket with. I too have concerns about the radical Hindu right, like the Bajrang Dal and the self appointed Moral Police. But I don’t have concerns about the Hindu, Christian, Sikh, Jain, & Buddhist communities. Whereas I do have concerns about the Muslim community. I am not the only person who feels this way. Time and again I hear snide comments that the Muslims get away with behaviour that other citizens don’t. It is also plainly evident that the Congress Party panders to the Muslim community for votes.

        With the events unfolding in the world the Muslim community can hardly uphold itself as role model of governance. Politicians thrive on Poverty Politics. This is the sorry state in India too. But Politicians in Islamic countries, take it to another level. They marginalize women, suppress education and neglect economics. India progresses despite the government. Just look at Pakistan. Why is it a failing State and has the image of being the center of terrorism.

        There are educated Muslims who share this view, and do distance themselves from this sorry state of affairs in the Muslim world. The BJP should make it a point to appeal to these people and embrace them. The people of “India first” then State, then Community, then Party, then Self and finally religion. We seem to be experiencing an inverted pyramid.

        1. says: Nivedita

          Very well said!
          It is disturbing to see that being pro-BJP, given the current state of affairs, is necessarily equated with being anti-muslim or non-secular/radical. I believe that discerning people see the BJP only as a better alternative rather than an obvious choice.
          Also, all these recent discussions in the media and on internet make me wonder if there is a new definition of secularism, specially for the Congress and those who call themselves liberal. The last I knew it meant that all religions were equal for the state and its people. Then why should a party, which is increasingly being seen as partial towards a particular religion ( for vote bank ) get away by harping on its ‘secularism’?

          But you rightly point that the BJP has a lot of work to do as far as its anti-Muslim image is concerned.

    3. says: Mc_Donald

      What is the alternative in your opinion? What should a common voter on the street do when he goes to vote? Any suggestion?

    4. says: AB

      Sir, I too am a Hindu and not a great fan of the BJP or Modi. But what is the alternative? For alternative to the Congress is a MUST. as they opposite of Pro is Con. So opposite of Progress in Congress and as the writer say, they systematically brought this once great country to its knees. No honest man is safe unless he keeps himself insignificant. ‘Madame’ and her coterie of crooks have stashed away enough in Swiss banks to last them 14 generations. When the moment comes, they will just fly out of the country with a hand bag. Be very sure of that.

    1. says: Mc_Donald

      Why don’t u write a pro-Indian article then Mr. Sahu? We will all know what you believe in and what according to you is the solution.

  8. says: Sahdev

    What you are complaining about is very much the grand strategy of Congress — to keep the Indian population divided using its rich diversity, to weaken the Indian economy by mismanaging it, to destroy democratic institutions/processes, and use every dirty trick available to cling to the power. Let us look at the roots of Congress and we will find some answers.

  9. says: Babubhai Vaghela Ahmedabad

    Dr Manmohan Singh has decided to stick to PMO Chair. And, BJP love him as Prime Minister though BJP make political hue and cry. That is why he is still PM.

Leave a comment
Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.