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| March 20, 2000 | ||
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and Prehistory The RSS should ask itself why it is out of tune with new India
The RSS is at once an avowedly cultural and in practice political body. This is dualism at its most disingenuous. It is there for all to see when the RSS patently interferes in the working of the Government. It wants to veto appointments -- the last-minute deletion of Jaswant Singh's name from the Union cabinet in March 1998 being the most infamous example -- and manipulate policy. Its economic frontal bodies are, at best, promoting a swadeshi autarky that went out of fashion with Enver Hoxha's Albania. At worst, and which is sometimes more than likely, they are spokespersons for business lobbies. To promote specific aims but cloak them in moral rhetoric is not a stratagem that can work every day. It certainly didn't in Gujarat. The RSS knows why. The question is: what will it do about it? Ransom Garu For
a man who is supposed to know his mind, N. Chandrababu Naidu has been
amazingly vacillatory in his reaction to the budget. He initially welcomed
it as "positive in approach" and in a matter of hours sought a
reversal of cuts in food and fertiliser subsidies. For Naidu and his
fellow chief ministers, there are two That Naidu says one thing at business conferences and does another in the state secretariat is not a new story. His election victory in October 1999 was facilitated in some measure by populist welfare schemes -- which added to the state's fiscal deficit of Rs 8,000 crore. Naidu has promised his people a grand future but delivered very little. As he sells dreams to his voters, he expects the Centre to pick up the marketing bill. His approach was no different in the previous Lok Sabha. Each time the government faced a crucial vote in the House, Naidu would fly down from Hyderabad and start haggling. There has to be some limit to running with the hare and hunting with the hounds -- even for somebody who would as easily do business with comrade Harkishen Singh Surjeet as with President Bill Clinton. |
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