Monday, March 3, 2014

Utopia: The political solution

Thought for the day
“The thing about democracy, beloveds, is that it is not neat, orderly, or quiet. It requires a certain relish for confusion.”
-          Molly Ivins (American, 1944-2007)
Word for the day
Sciamachy (n)
An act or instance of fighting a shadow or an imaginary enemy.
(Source: Dictionary.com)
Teaser for the day
Heard Sanjay Nirupam talk about secularism!

Utopia: The political solution

“It is Swaraj when we learn to rule ourselves. It is, therefore, in the palm of our hands. But such Swaraj has to be experienced, by each one for himself. One drowning man will never save another.”
“I believe that you want the millions of India to be happy, not that you want the reins of government in your hands. If that be so, we have to consider only one thing: how can the millions obtain self-rule?”
[M. K. Gandhi, Hind Swaraj]
I have been highlighting since ever that one of the best things India has got in past 150years is Mahatma Gandhi. And the most unfortunate thing to occur since independence from British rule in 1947 is brazen desertion of Mahatma Gandhi by Indian politicians. To my mind hanging his pictures in government offices or currency notes and naming roads after him is even more contemptuous given the complete ignominy for his principles and ideas.
If that not be so, how the political class could have so insolently ignored the model of Swaraj conceived and proposed by him. The Gandhian idea of Swaraj could have been proposed only by a person like him who had experienced India so intimately.
It may be pertinent to recall here that in my view Arvind Kejriwal’s idea of Swaraj is at best a perversion of Gandhian concept of Swaraj and deserves to be rejected with due contempt.
M. P. Mathai explains the Gandhian idea of Swaraj very succinctly as follows:
“Although the word swaraj means self-rule, Gandhi gave it the content of an integral revolution that encompasses all spheres of life. “At the individual level swaraj is vitally connected with the capacity for dispassionate self-assessment, ceaseless self-purification and growing swadeshi or self-reliance". Politically swaraj is self-government and not good government (for Gandhi, good government is no substitute for self-government) and it means continuous effort to be independent of government control, whether it is foreign government or whether it is national. In the other words, it is sovereignty of the people based on pure moral authority. Economically, poorna swaraj means full economic freedom for the toiling millions. For Gandhi, swaraj of the people meant the sum total of the swaraj (self-rule) of individuals and so he clarified that for him swaraj meant freedom for the meanest of his countrymen. And in its fullest sense, swaraj is much more than freedom from all restraints, it is self-rule, self-restraint and could be equated with moksha or salvation."
In one of his letters to Leo Tolstoy Gandhi explained Swaraj as follows:
“Independence begins at the bottom. A society must be built in which every village has to be self sustained and capable of managing its own affairs. It will be trained and prepared to perish in the attempt to defend itself against any onslaught from without. This does not exclude dependence on and willing help from neighbours or from the world. It will be a free and voluntary play of mutual forces. In this structure composed of innumerable villages, there will be ever widening, never ascending circles.
Growth will not be a pyramid with the apex sustained by the bottom. But it will be an oceanic circle whose center will be the individual. Therefore the outermost circumference will not wield power to crush the inner circle but will give strength to all within and derive its own strength from it.” (as cited in Wikipedia)
Thus, the individual is the sole basis of Swaraj. Swaraj is unfathomable without dispassionate self-assessment, ceaseless self-purification and growing self-reliance at individual level; and sovereignty of moral authority, as against the political authority.
Swaraj encompasses fiercely competitive free market, moral duty to be free, fearless, truthful, fair, just, self reliant, nationalist, and religious.
This Swaraj, many argue is Utopian in current context. Some argue that it is desirable but we have traveled too far down the road we took post independence from British rule; and it is too late to go back and begin again.
In my view, this defeatist and fatigued attitude is unwarranted. What we need is a zero base discussion on the subject and solutions will emerge that would lead us to the desired goal of making 1.3bn people free, fearless and happy. An incremental approach howsoever sincere might not yield the desired results.
With this in mind I dream of a free, fearless and fair socio-political organization for the country.
During my “Discover India” trip last summer, I found strong evidence of numerous democratic assemblies within various communities and localities. From my experience I know for certain that most Indians not only feel comfortable working with the members of their own community, but are usually most productive when operating within the network of their “Own people”.
This “communalism” is arguably a key strength of Indian society. Therefore, in my view, the social ecology model suggested by author and activist Murray Bookchin which advocates a “stateless, classless, decentralized society consisting of a network of directly democratic citizens' assemblies in individual communities/cities organized in a confederal fashion” appears relevant in our context.
Unfortunately, our politicians and social activists have dissipated the term “communalism” to mean intolerance and hatred towards other religions, especially amongst Hindus and Muslims. This debauchery has introduced many distortions in our socio-political order. In my view this needs to be corrected as pre-condition before we begin working on any course correction.
Religious fundamentalism (which is usually referred to as “communalism” in Indian context), is mostly a political problem in India. A secular political system, as envisaged by Mahatma Gandhi and incorporated in the soul of our Constitution, would automatically weaken these miniscule elements leading to their eventual extinction.
My Utopian state is thus based on our ability to build and nurture strong communities and live in harmony with the nature.
The key features of my Utopian political organization are as follows:
Local council
(a)   The primary unit of the country should be a democratic assembly of people in a town or village (Town or village council).
(b)   Each such town or village should directly elect a suitable number of representatives on a periodic basis. The winning candidate must score at least 51% of the eligible votes (not just the casted votes).
(c)   Every adult citizen of that town/village should have equal opportunity to get elected for a term of three years.
(d)   The local council shall be a permanent body with 1/3rd members retiring by rotation each year. No person shall be elected for more than 2 terms.
(e)   The performance of each local council member should be evaluated on annual basis by an independent agency. A member failing to score the passing grade should be barred from politics for a period of 6yrs.
(f)     The chairman of the local council should be elected with minimum 51% members supporting him/her.
District council
(g)   Town and villages with largely homogeneous characteristics could be grouped in various districts. Each district should have a governing council.
(h)   Local councils falling within the districts should nominate from their best members who have served 2 complete terms to the district council.
(i)      The number of members to be nominated by each local council should be in proportion to the population, area and social indicators.
(j)      The district council should have a fixed term of 6years, with 1/3rd members retiring by rotation every 2years.
(k)    No member should be nominated to district council more than once.
(l)      The performance of each district council member should be evaluated on annual basis by an independent agency. A member failing to score the passing grade should be barred from politics for a minimum period of 10yrs.
(m) The chairman of the District council should be elected with minimum 51% members supporting him/her.
National council
(n)   Each district council should nominate members to the national council, in proportion to population, area and social indicators.
(o)   Districts council should nominate from their best performing members who have served their complete term on the district council.
(p)   The chairman of the National council should be elected with minimum 51% members supporting him/her.
Tomorrow I shall present my Utopian economic model to go with this political model.
Earlier in this series:

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