PRESIDENT"S RULE
War over the BadlandsConfronted
with certain defeat in the Rajya Sabha, the government looks for ways to extract maximum
political mileage and keep the pressure on Laloo.
By Harinder
Baweja
It's not often that the BJP has
occasion to celebrate these days. Last Tuesday's Holi, however, was different. Having
taunted the Opposition for constantly "jumping into an empty well", Prime
Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee joined Home Minister L.K. Advani and Finance Minister
Yashwant Sinha in literally painting Lutyens' Delhi red with gulal. "It's been three
lucky Bs for the BJP," said Advani, "the bus to Lahore, the budget and
Bihar."
In a sense, the Bihar victory evoked the greatest
satisfaction. What once seemed a question of the Vajpayee Government's very survival was
transformed into a resounding motion of confidence once the 29-vote margin of victory was
announced by the Lok Sabha Speaker. Thanks to Vajpayee's own spirited initiative, the
Government succeeded not only in keeping all its allies by its side but also winning the
support of the Bahujan Samaj Party. In getting the Telugu Desam Party (TDP) and the Akali
Dal to endorse President's rule in Bihar, the Government even succeeded in winning over
those who have never concealed their distaste for Article 356.
WEIGHING THE OPTIONS |
| »Go
to the Rajya Sabha for ratification. Motion turned down. Rabri Devi government restored in
Bihar. »Avoid taking ratification to Rajya Sabha. The proclamation lapses on April
12. Rabri's government is restored.
»Revoke
President's rule and restore Rabri's government without risking a Rajya Sabha vote.
»Cite
P.B. Sawant's judgement in the Bommai case to dissolve Bihar Assembly after presidential
proclamation lapses or is not ratified by the Rajya Sabha. Matter goes to Supreme Court. |
Of course, the elation was bound to be short-lived. It
is one thing winning a prestige battle in the Lok Sabha. The real hurdle is the Rajya
Sabha where the BJP and its allies are in a hopeless minority. If the Upper House votes
down the ratification of President's rule, it would automatically lead to the restoration
of the state Assembly and, by implication, the Rabri Devi government.
When Parliament reconvened on March 4, Laloo Prasad Yadav and
Mulayam Singh Yadav managed to successfully disrupt the Lok Sabha, demanding that the
Bihar proclamation be introduced immediately in the Rajya Sabha. Anxious to dispel the
impression that Sonia Gandhi had somehow miscalculated in taking on the Government on
Bihar, the Congress joined the boisterous Rashtriya Loktantrik Morcha (RLM) chorus. Said
Congress spokesman Ajit Jogi: "The Government should give a categorical assurance it
will not undermine democratic and constitutional institutions. The resolutions should be
brought to the Rajya Sabha." The Congress was anxious to not lose out on this chance
to draw blood.
For the Government there are no easy choices. It can chicken
out of its hopeless predicament in the Rajya Sabha by unilaterally issuing another
proclamation, revoking President's rule. But such a step involves paying a price. When
President K. R. Narayanan readily endorsed the second Cabinet decision to dismiss Rabri,
he wasn't merely rubber stamping the executive. The President actually stated in writing
that his misgivings of September last year had been adequately addressed in both the
Cabinet's recommendations and the governor's report. For the Government, this was a moral
victory and it makes no sense to resile from this high ground without extracting full
political mileage.
True, the TDP and the Akalis are in favour of the Government
extricating itself from Bihar at the earliest but then, these parties have no stake in the
state. Within the BJP and the Samata Party, the mood is in favour of prolonging
President's rule as long as it is legally tenable. But here too, there are tactical
differences. One lot, perhaps the majority, prefers a grandstanding approach in the Rajya
Sabha with a clear focus on embarrassing the Congress for its alleged indifference to the
plight of Dalits. Defence Minister George Fernandes had, after all, done precisely that in
the Lok Sabha.
Another section, however, believes that a defeat in the Rajya
Sabha shouldn't be treated as the last word on the subject. At the risk of aggravating
political confrontation, the Centre is seriously exploring ways of extending President's
rule beyond April 12. One proposal centres on the P.B. Sawant-Kuldip Singh judgement in
the S.R. Bommai case.
Although the issue of ratification of Article 356 was not
central to the Supreme Court's judgement, Sawant and Singh had noted that the restoration
of the status quo ante was not inevitable in case Parliament failed to ratify a
presidential proclamation. "The inevitable consequence in such a situation is fresh
elections and the constitution of a new legislative assembly and the ministry in the
state." Since P. Jeevan Reddy had delivered a contrary judgement in the same case,
the Government has the option of approaching the Supreme Court to clarify matters and,
pending a judgement, stay the revocation of President's rule.
Unfortunately for the Government, this line of thinking is
not even favoured by its own legal luminaries. According to them, the Sawant-Singh
observations are per incuriam and unlikely to stand up to judicial scrutiny. An adverse
judgement by the Supreme Court will not only deflate the Government's claims of moral and
political legitimacy, it could confer an element of sanctity to the opposition charge that
the BJP-Samata alliance is out to scuttle democracy in Bihar.
"They must come forward and let us know when they plan
to take it up in the Rajya Sabha," says Sharad Pawar, leader of the Opposition in the
Lok Sabha. By hinting that this will perhaps not be the case before March 8 -- when
Vajpayee makes his reply to the President's address -- the Government is clearly buying
time. There is method in the prevarication. By prolonging President's rule till the bitter
end, the Government has a clear political agenda:
- To build a dossier against Laloo using state government
documents, which were hitherto inaccessible.
- Assure a nervous bureaucracy that the Centre would stand by
them -- even accommodate them in Delhi -- if the Bihar government was reinstated.
- Try and wean away enough of the 151 Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD)
MLAs (in a house of 324) to prevent Rabri's automatic reinduction if the assembly is
restored.
- Force the Congress to put unacceptable conditions on Laloo as
the price for opposing the ratification in Parliament.
- Use the short spell of President's rule to consolidate the
anti-Laloo forces behind the BJP-Samata alliance.
In a sense, these are fall-back strategies since there is
little hope of the Government winning the constitutional battle. The Government ministers
grudgingly concede that the charge of Congress perfidy is unsubstantiated. At no stage,
they admit, was the Government explicitly assured of Congress' support for the
ratification of President's rule. Congress General Secretary Sushil Kumar Shinde, who met
Advani with a list of demands -- setting up of a police station, a primary school and
rehabilitation of the families of the Jehanabad victims -- apparently told the home
minister that Sonia had not made up her mind on the issue. When Advani telephoned Sonia
after his meeting with Shinde, he did not broach the subject of Congress support.
Clearly, the Government took a gamble. Now, as it struggles
to cling on to Bihar in the face of overwhelming odds, it is trying hard to justify its
decision of recommending President's rule. This was clear from the impressive Rs 25,800
crore "Bihar development package" announced by Vajpayee. It is no coincidence
that the prime minister was accompanied by Fernandes, Sinha and Railway Minister Nitish
Kumar in whose constituencies various projects were sanctioned, including the setting up
of an ordnance factory, a railway project and three mega power projects. The Home Ministry
too requisitioned an additional 20 companies of para military forces, taking the strength
up to 64, even as Bihar BJP leader Sushil Modi demanded the arrest of Laloo, saying he was
responsible for "masterminding" the killing of four Ranbir Sena activists on
March 2.
In the rapidly escalating war involving the BJP-Samata
alliance, the Congress and the RJD, it is imperative for the Government to put a final lid
on the question of President's rule. The Government seems to be in a hurry to position
itself on a future political battle. But first it must settle the present one. Before the
advantage it gained from its victory in the Lok Sabha is nullified in the cross-currents
of partisan politics and one-upmanship.
-with Javed
M. Ansari and Sanjay Kumar Jha |