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| CHEERS: Mallya hopes to speak on industrial
issues |
The biennial
elections to the Rajya Sabha saw the grand entry of two business tycoons-Vijay
Mallya of United Breweries and Rajkumar Nandlal Dhoot of Videocon-into
the Council of States. In the voting for 22 of the 59 seats that fell
vacant, those who made it were men of real resources-Mallya (Karnataka),
Dhoot and Mukesh Patel (Maharashtra), Dilip Ray (Orissa), Prem Gupta (Bihar)
and Dinesh Trivedi (West Bengal). In a House of 245, they constitute a
group of 16. That's a sizeable representation.
Since Ray, Patel, Gupta and Trivedi have had a term in the Rajya Sabha
and as such already subordinated their business interests to a career
in politics, it is the entry of Mallya and Dhoot that stands out today.
What has really lured these barons into politics? What do they hope to
achieve? Why do they, powerful and rich, want to be MPs? For parliamentary
privilege? An admission that real power is in politics? Or is it all about
that diplomatic passport? They won't say, they take refuge in lofty ideals.
"I am not an MP for status or prestige. That I have as the chairman
of a successful business group," says Mallya. "This new avenue
is a good platform to serve a wider section of society, especially the
rural folk."
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| SMART MOVE: Videocon's Dhoot entered the Rajya
Sabha from Maharashtra |
For Congress MP R.P. Goenka, who got elected in 2000, it's post-business
employment: "I had retired from business. I wanted to be gainfully
employed. I became an MP to serve the Congress." A dapper Baijayanta
Panda, who was elected to the House as Biju Janata Dal (BJD) candidate
from Orissa two years ago, says it was the Government that pushed him
into politics. After a nine-year stint in the US, Panda returned to family
business in 1991 but soon found he could not innovate even in the climate
of liberalisation. "I was very frustrated, spending 80 per cent of
my time with bureaucrats and politicians to process papers," he says.
A founding member of the BJD, Panda maintains he is not a politician but
"an industrialist who is on a sabbatical in politics".
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INTERVIEW: VIJAY MALLYA
"I will not make politics a career"
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| Flamboyant liquor baron Vijay Mallya, 46, spoke
to Principal Correspondent Stephen David at the UB Group headquarters
in Bangalore before leaving for Paris for "a break". He
is expected back on April 14 to make his debut in Parliament the next
day.
Q. Why did you want to become a member of Parliament?
A. Parliament is a good forum to articulate on issues that otherwise
would not be heard. I would have liked to come through the Lok Sabha
but winning the Rajya Sabha elections itself was quite a challenge.
I feel I have reached a stage where my businesses can be entrusted
to professionals. I now have time on my hands to concentrate on
issues that would concern me as an MP. But I would not like to make
politics a career.
Q. You were backed by Ramakrishna Hegde and the JD parties,
but who will you align with?
A. I will be an Independent so that I am universally acceptable.
Q. The BJP tried to prevent your
contesting ...
A. The Karnataka unit of the BJP is on self-destruct mode. I
fought the poll fair and square. They tried to stop me by accusing
me of several things, but both the returning officer and the Election
Commission thwarted their efforts.
Q. What are your priorities as an MP?
A. I am just three days old as an MP. Give me some time, I am
a quick learner. I can speak on issues concerning industry. Of course,
I am not going to be speaking on Ayodhya or other political topics
right now.
Q. What was the reaction of your spiritual guru, Sri Sri Ravi
Shankar, to the win?
A. He was absolutely delighted.
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Gupta says money is not every thing. "I am not using politics to
expand business. I have achieved in business whatever I set out to achieve,"
he says. "I had an urge to serve people, to serve society. That is
why I became an MP." According to Samajwadi Party (SP) leader Amar
Singh, businessmen are exploring the world of politics because money has
no incremental value beyond a point. "If journalist Rajiv Shukla
can enter Parliament using the industrialist route, why can't industrialists
themselves do it?" he asks. Unhappy with his own inability to play
an active role in the Rajya Sabha, Singh has a word of caution for the
new entrants: "All industrialists will get disillusioned. The Rajya
Sabha is a serious forum. They can become MPs but not politicians."
Analysts say that fractured mandates in state legislatures in the past
one decade have led to the phenomenon of marginal Rajya Sabha seats. Such
seats have usually to be secured through monetary inducements. Also, the
client-patron relationship between political parties and businessmen has
undergone a change under the New Economic Policy. With the end of the
licence raj, businessmen who finance political parties have begun to see
participation in power as a viable quid pro quo.
Old-timers recall how under the licence raj of the 1970s and '80s, no
political party would flaunt its association with industrialists, except
perhaps the Jan Sangh which sent Viren Shah to the Rajya Sabha in 1975.
But then he was not a greenhorn; he had already had a term in the Lok
Sabha (1967-71). On the other hand, Indira Gandhi did not mind nationalist-industrialists
like G.D. Somani contesting the Lok Sabha elections but never accommodated
them in the Council of States. Not even K.K. Birla, whose family was associated
with the Congress. In 1984 she allowed him to contest only as a Congress-backed
Independent candidate.
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| NEW ROLE: Goenka views his stint in the Rajya
Sabha as post-business employment |
The first time an industrialist made it to the Rajya Sabha as an independent
candidate was in 1988. He was Kamal Morarka. A close aide of former prime
minister Chandra Shekhar, he even went on to become a minister. Six years
later, Morarka was followed by others. The 1994 biennial elections marked
the entry of two industrialists-Sanjay Dalmia (SP) and Jayant Malhoutra-from
Uttar Pradesh. In 1996, five more joined: Amar Singh (SP) Akhilesh Das
(Congress), Suresh Keswani (Shiv Sena-backed independent), Mukesh Patel
(Shiv Sena) and Prem Chand Gupta (RJD).
"Industrialists are not untouchables. If labour leaders can be
in the Rajya Sabha, why not industrialists?" asks former Lok Sabha
secretary-general Subhash Kashyap. He points out how three-fourths of
Switzerland's elected representatives are bankers. Rajya Sabha Deputy
Chairperson Najma Heptullah agrees: "If all the erstwhile rajas and
maharajas can be in our Parliament, what is wrong if industrialists come
in? I feel every type of person should be in the House."
Career politicians, however, have a problem with the baron in the House.
"If the Yadavs with their criminal backgrounds became MPs in order
to use parliamentary privilege to avoid arrests on murder charges, businessmen/industrialists
want to use the immunity to save their skin in customs/excise cases,"
says a Congress leader. He mentions the frequent parties thrown by an
MP-businessman from the south. Revenue officials are usually present in
large numbers at this leader's do. There will be more parties now, with
new hosts.
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