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2014
With respect to Dalit issues, the alleged differences between right, left and centre that matter so much to elite politics are quite meaningless.
BJP’s resounding victory marks the first time in 30 years, since the assassination of Indira Gandhi in 1984, that a single party has commanded such support across the country. It not only marks a symbolic end to the Nehruvian era of dynastic politics; but also the unprecedented rise of a Hindu nationalist party under a leader whose reputation has been tainted by charges of complicity in the Gujarat communal violence of 2002. Voter fatigue and disillusionment with UPA’s economic record, including the massive scale of corruption, only partially explain the results. They fail to account for India’s reversion to single-party rule in 2014 as opposed to a more divided mandate given Modi’s controversial communal past. The larger than life persona of Modi remains decidedly crucial to any analysis of the 16th Lok Sabha. But while the exact course of his tenure, from a structuralist point of view, remains difficult to predict, the seismic rise of Modi, nonetheless, begs the question: So what has prompted India’s Lurch to the Right? Is this the beginning of a new era for India? Arguably Indian secularism — albeit a defining norm in the Constitution with its corollary set of checks and balances — has not been left untainted by secular parties occasionally pandering to communalism in order to capture vote banks. Does the 16th Lok Sabha, then, signal a mere shift in referents from secularism to development or a qualitative shift in the ethos of Indian mainstream politics?
For centuries, Dalits in India have been facing different forms of injustices and exploitation. As the years go by, the forms of atrocities and magnitude of oppression keep changing. They are indeed on the rise. Manifestations of violence perpetuated against the Dalits have been horrendous and appalling and thus continues to grow year after year. There has been no let up. However, since Independence, there has been one common yardstick which is being glaringly seen and followed by almost all the political parties irrespective of ideological slants and political positioning is that of luring the Dalits whenever elections are held. It is a well-known fact to all including the Dalits that during elections the political parties gets engaged in wooing the Dalits with all kinds of incentives/offers. The formula is: At the time of elections lure the Dalits, and after that lynch them-wooing and lynching dyamic. The present dispensation at the Centre and also BJP-ruled states follow this formula meticulously and candidly. BJP in particular is indeed known for this sort of game and is well versed playing its cards to win over the Dalits. It's a known-fact that political parties whether national or regional cannot ignore nor do away the Dalits. It goes without saying that whether the political parties fully committed to the development of the Dalits or not, they need their votes. When it comes to electoral politics it is not varna system, but votes which turns from impure to pure—from pollution to purity. This is why political parties by and large have wooed the sub-identities within the Dalit fold and managed to enjoy their votes for decades. While others offered freebees and promised special schemes for them during elections. The political parties did employ the formula of polarization within the broader domain of Dalit identity and somehow made their votes secured. Nonetheless, some political parties consider the Dalits as their vote banks, while others use them as 'killu kerai', in Tamil it simply means 'pluck like that of plucking greens' meaning 'use and throw'. It is to be acknowledged that Dalits' population in the country is about 200 million or about 20 per cent of India's population which is huge and decisive, and therefore 'most needed' and 'sort after'. Out of many, one classic example is, since 2014, the BJP both in the Lok Sabha elections had and in the Vidanasabha elections did sideline the minorities and the Dalits relatively. BJP per se go by the RSS's analysis of the Indian social order and in that Dalits are regarded as the last and the least. This is why in the BJP-ruled states we hardly see and come across any Dalits holding important portfolios. Some time ago in the party, BJP once had a Dalit president and hardly had he managed to complete his tenure. RSS is out and out against the Dalits because its schema and ideological moorings do not subscribe to accommodating Dalits to its fold. Dalits are antithetical to RSS-BJP's notion of Bharath. RSS is Brahmin-centric organization and BJP is Brahmin-controlled party. So, RSS-BJP for tactical and strategic reasons there have been shifts and turns, but the underlying principles that govern RSS-BJP is Hindu Rashtra premised on gradations of caste system implying homo-hierarchicus.
On B.R. Ambedkar’s birth anniversary, a Dalit scholar reflects on his legacy on contemporary India’s democracy
2017. Compilation of articles and illustrations concentrating on the rise of rightist politics and its impact on the deprived sections of the Indian society by BHAGAT SINGH'S SOCIALIST INDIA (https://www.facebook.com/nbshsra/?fref=ts).
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