Sunday, December 4, 2022

The Red blunders: The communists have consistently betrayed national interests

 

The Red blunders: The communists have consistently betrayed national interests

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Rudrangshu Mukherjee   |   Published 21.08.07, 12:00 AM

If nationalism, as the historian Jack Gallagher was fond of quipping, devours its parents, communism consumes its own ideology. Communism was born under the sign of internationalism. The project of world revolution did not recognize national boundaries. Thus, it is funny to see Indian communists today positioning themselves as great protectors of national sovereignty.

Indian communists have always had a very uncomfortable relationship with nationalism. Some of the major debates and divisions within the Communist Party of India have revolved around the question of nationalism and the national movement. And, if the truth be told, these debates do not exactly hold up the comrades in an edifying light. On the scorecard of nationalism, the performance of Indian communists is poor to say the least. (On internationalism, their score is irrelevant, since a world communist revolution is not even a pipe dream after the collapse of socialism and the exposure of the many crimes of the socialist regimes in Soviet Russia, in Eastern Europe, in China, in Albania, under Pol Pot in Cambodia and so on.)

To begin with the most notorious example that communists have never been able to live down: 1942. The CPI was officially against the Quit India movement. What needs to be emphasized here is that this decision of the CPI was not based on any understanding of the Indian situation by Indian communists. The opposition to the clarion call of 1942 was the outcome of a diktat emanating from Moscow. When Hitler attacked his erstwhile ally, the Soviet Union, in 1941, the fight against Nazism overnight became a People’s War for all communists. The directive from Moscow was carried by Achhar Singh Chinna, alias Larkin, who travelled from the Soviet Union to India with the full knowledge of the British authorities. In India, it meant communists had to isolate themselves from the mainstream of national life and politics and see British rule as a friendly force since the communists’ “fatherland”, Soviet Russia, was an ally of Britain. A critical decision affecting the strategic and the tactical line of the party was thus taken defying national interests at the behest of a foreign power, whose orders determined the positions and actions of the CPI.

In 1948, within a few months of India becoming independent, the CPI under the leadership of B.T. Randive launched the line that this freedom was fake (yeh azadi jhooti hai), and argued that the situation in India was ripe for an armed revolution. The Randive line led to the expulsion of P.C. Joshi, who believed that freedom from British rule was a substantial achievement and that, tactically, the communist movement would gain by supporting leaders like Jawaharlal Nehru who, Joshi said, represented a “progressive” trend within the Congress. Apart from the inner-party struggle, what needs to be noted here is that the Randive line, which completely misread the national mood, was the direct outgrowth of a policy formulated by the Comintern (or the Cominform, as it had renamed itself), in other words, Moscow. The directive of Moscow to the Indian communists was that Congress should be opposed since it was no more than a satellite of imperialism. The retreat from this line was also sounded from Moscow in the form of an editorial entitled, “For a Lasting Peace”, in the mouthpiece of the Cominform.

The defeat of Joshi in the inner- party struggle camouflaged an important and lasting tension within the CPI. This concerned the party’s ideological and tactical position regarding the Congress. Joshi represented a trend within the party that believed in closer ties with the Congress, especially Nehru. It argued that, given the incipient nature of the proletarian movement in India in the Forties and Fifties, it was necessary to seek an alliance with the Congress since it was the party that was closest to the masses and it had leaders who were favourably inclined to socialism and its global future. It was Joshi’s firm belief that the democratic revolution in India could be completed only through an alliance between the national bourgeoisie represented within the Congress and the CPI. While the opposite trend saw the Congress as a bourgeois party and therefore hostile to the interests of the working class and the communist movement. The Congress could not be trusted, a suspicion that was strengthened when the first communist government in Kerala led by E.M.S. Namboodiripad was dismissed by Nehru in the summer of 1959.

Three years later, in 1962, when the Sino-Indian border conflict occurred, a section of communists, among whom Namboodiripad was prominent, chose to uphold the cause of China and portrayed India as the aggressor. This was yet another occasion when the communist movement found itself isolated from the national mainstream. It led eventually to a split in the CPI with the pro-Chinese faction leaving the parent party to form the Communist Party of India (Marxist). A rump remained as the CPI — a party totally subservient to the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, and some would say even fully funded by it.

To these dates — 1942, 1948, and 1962 — when the communists chose not to serve Indian interests but to act at the behest of either Moscow or Peking (as it was then) can now be added another date: 2007. The communists are poised at the moment to withdraw support from the government led by Manmohan Singh unless the latter agrees to renegotiate the Indo-US nuclear treaty. The opposition of the communists is based not on substantial objections to the terms of the treaty, but to the fact that it brings India closer to the US. Prakash Karat, the general secretary of the CPI(M), made this clear in an article in People’s Democracy. He wrote, “The Left parties have been watching with disquiet the way the UPA government has gone about forging close strategic and military ties with the United States….The Left is clear that going ahead with the agreement will bind India to the United States in a manner that will seriously impair an independent foreign policy and our strategic autonomy.”

These, as anyone will recognize, are a series of ideological assertions and not rational arguments. The Left, since the Nineties, has lost all its ideological moorings: socialism is gone and China has turned to market capitalism; within India it has no political base anywhere save in West Bengal and Kerala. With no policies of its own, it has accepted economic reforms and begun to woo capital with some gusto in West Bengal. With everything gone, the Left clings to its anti-Americanism as a last ideological anchor. In the present context, however, the Left’s anti-US position echoes what the Chinese Communist Party is saying on the Indo-US nuclear deal. Karat, whether he likes it or not, is only parroting, like his predecessors did in 1942, 1947 and 1962, a political line coming out of a foreign country, in this case one that is hostile to India. The intensity of his opposition is a reflection of the enduring discomfort of the communists with a pro-Congress stance.

Given its track record, the Left’s attempt to see itself as a protector of India’s national sovereignty and autonomy is a disgrace. Communists in India have acted, at critical periods, at the behest of the Soviet Union or China. In so doing, communists have sacrificed India’s national interests. They are about to do the same now.

The history of Indian communism is the story of a series of historic blunders. The red flag has never fluttered because those who hold it aloft know only how to blunder. What is pathetic is that even the blunders of the communists are not their own!

'Modi govt is not fascist': Prakash Karat's salvo at Sitaram Yechury reveals schism in the Left

 'Modi govt is not fascist': Prakash Karat's salvo at Sitaram Yechury reveals schism in the Left

It’s Karat’s way of hitting back at Yechury’s decision that led to the CPI(M) and the Congress contesting the West Bengal assembly elections together.

Ashok K Singh September 13, 2016 17:59:29 IST

'Modi govt is not fascist': Prakash Karat's salvo at Sitaram Yechury reveals schism in the Left

Within a few days of CPI(M) ideologue Prakash Karat declaring that the Narendra Modi government is ‘authoritarian’ but not ‘fascist’, the JNU student organisations affiliated to Left parties are celebrating their victory over the ABVP in union elections as crushing defeat of ‘fascist’ forces.


In between — after Karat’s opinion piece in The Indian Express and before the JNUSU election results — Kanhaiya Kumar dared Karat at a speech in Kolkata: "There is a certain veteran CPM leader who is also a former student of the JNU. He said that the Modi government was authoritarian and not fascist. To him I want to say that comrade, if you don’t want to fight anymore, please retire and go to New York. We will fight our battle."


Modi govt is not fascist Prakash Karats salvo at Sitaram Yechury reveals schism in the Left

A file image of CPM leader Prakash Karat. PTI


The timing of Karat’s position chiding the Left and liberal opinion for calling the Modi government fascist, sweeping win of the Left in JNUSU elections and Kanhaiya’s audacious fulminations against Karat may be a coincidence; the deep schism among the Left over the nature of the BJP government is not. It exposes the confusion and the crisis facing the Left parties.


The crises and the weaknesses of the Left have many shades of ironies, which either they don’t want to see or they ignore for avowed ideological purity.


Communist parties for a very long time have got used to patting themselves on the back for their sterling performance of affiliated student outfits in the JNU even as their performances in the national and state-level elections have been steadily declining.


While their base and influence have been shrinking among workers, peasants and middle classes — the ideological relevance holds in a small, post-graduate university. It’s a small island of their bastions in the heart of Delhi that reminds them of their ideological relevance amid steady decline elsewhere. That’s the irony.


At a time when they should been closing ranks within the party and working to unitedly face a ‘right-wing authoritarian’ or a ‘communal fascist’ government, the CPI(M) is quibbling over the ‘nature’ of the Modi government.


It’s quibbling that cost the CPI(M) as much as the post of the Prime Minister, which was offered to Jyoti Basu in 1996 at the head of United Front government. Basu was inclined but the CPI(M) hardline apparatchiks vetoed the proposal. Later, Basu himself described the moment as ‘historical blunder’.


The current differences in the party over the nature of the BJP and the Congress too might lead to another historical blunder in the future. For the moment, it exposes the sharp divisions in the CPI(M) between the general secretary Sitaram Yechury and former general secretary Prakash Karat.


When communist apparatchiks differ and debate, the common people, who are supposed to form the support base of the party, get confused and confounded. In simple terms, their differences relate to whether or not the CPI(M) should align with the Congress to fight and defeat the BJP.


Yechury is a pragmatist. He favours close electoral cooperation with the Congress to challenge the BJP. He views the Modi government espousing ‘fascist’ tendencies and argues that the BJP-RSS are working to establish a ‘fascist Hindu Rashtra' in India. He has used the analogy of Germany of 1930s to warn that just as Adolf Hitler used aggressive nationalism to establish fascism, the Modi government was using nationalism to turn the country into a fascist religious state.


Yechury’s line of argument opens the door for forming a front with the Congress. Karat’s disavowal of Yechury’s contention completely shuts the door on cooperation with the Congress.


Karat, as a purist ideologue, has determined that the Modi government is showing authoritarian tendencies but it doesn’t have traits of classical fascism as it developed in Europe. He views both the BJP and the Congress as representatives of identical social and economic interests. Therefore, Karat doesn’t advocate proximity with the Congress to challenge the BJP.


Karat’s openly anti-Yechury stand is well timed too. One, it’s Karat’s way of hitting back at Yechury’s decision that led to the CPI(M) and the Congress contesting the West Bengal assembly elections together. Two, it’s an attempt to preempt Yechury from taking initiative to form a front with the Congress and Samajwadi Party against the BJP in UP and later at the national level. He is also warning Yechury against aligning closely with the Congress in Parliament. Karat favours uniting the non-BJP and the non-Congress parties on one platform.


While the CPI(M) is riven with internal divisions, in the JNUSU, the Left student organisations came together to defeat the BJP’s efforts to strengthen its influence on the campus. The JNUSU victory is erroneously viewed by large sections of the Left and liberal voices as a major success.


It’s erroneous because over the years, the communists have lost the political space in the country they occupied. The united CPI was the second largest party in the Lok Sabha from the first general elections in 1952 till the third general elections in 1962. In the current Lok Sabha, the CPI(M) with nine members is ranked ninth from the top, the CPI has one member.


The Left parties, their supporters and sympathizers seem to take great pride in having larger than life presence in JNU. When they dominate the debate in the JNU and in auditoriums of Delhi, they fancy they can fight the battle to protect the interests of the powerless and dispossessed. That they can fight the battle to stop Modi government from pursuing ‘authoritarian’ or ‘fascist’ policies.


In a country which has the world’s highest number of poor, highest number of children with malnutrition, one of the worst drop-out rates in schools, Yechury and Karat’s party has been debating the character of the State and political parties for 70 years and has come to no conclusion.


That’s the irony of the Left.









Prakash Karat has led CPM towards a historic blunder by shooting down Congress alliance

 Prakash Karat has led CPM towards a historic blunder by shooting down Congress alliance

Kumar Ketkar

KUMAR KETKAR

29 January, 2018 10:00 am IST



CPI(M) leader Prakash Karat / wikimedia commons

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Indian communists have come to regret many political blunders – from opposing Quit India to supporting Emergency. Saying no to anti-Modi alliance could be another.


Angry and frustrated that his theories were being distorted and propagated by some self-styled radical advocates, Karl Marx is believed to have said in 1883: “What is certain is that I am not a Marxist.”


This was said in response to French intellectual activist Jules Guesde in the context of the failed revolt of the proletariat in 1871, known as the “Paris Commune”.  Marx accused Guesde and his associates of “revolutionary phrase mongering”.


I cannot dare say that Prakash Karat, the former general secretary of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) [CPI(M)], does not know the anguish expressed by the philosopher in whose name his party exists. Last week, Karat proposed in his draft resolution before the party’s Central Committee that both the BJP and the Congress are “neo-liberal”, and therefore, to form a broad “anti-BJP front” has no relevance.


In the shocking formulation, Karat further said that the RSS is a “semi-fascist” organisation with a hardcore communal agenda, but the Hindutva of the BJP does not make the ruling party fascist. The CPI(M) is a radical anti-capitalist, anti-imperialist and anti-communal party, and cannot have a political alliance with the Congress in any form, he said.


It defies all dialectical logic that the RSS is a “semi-fascist” organisation, but its political front is not even “semi-fascist” but just “neo-liberal”. But Karat’s line was accepted, and general secretary Sitaram Yechury’s thesis was rejected by a very good margin of 55 to 31. That in itself is a break from the established convention; after all, communist party general secretaries are known to be all-powerful, evende jure heads of states.


Karat later explained that a perfect inner democracy prevails in the functioning of the party, and the Central Committee discussed all views before coming to the conclusion that there should be “no alliance or understanding” with the Congress. He further said there was no factionalism in the party.


The communists are past masters in semantics and ideological skullduggery. They also provide “dialectical” explanations to defend the “official” line. They distinguish between “revisionists” and “reformers” and “renegades”. These are sharp abuses in the communist lexicon. So now, Yechury will be a revisionist and Karat a revolutionary.


What would Stalin have done?


The CPI(M) has always prided itself in defending Stalin, even when its twin, the CPI, had given up its Stalinist position. But in a strictly historical context, the CPI(M) cannot claim the Stalinist legacy.


Stalin formed a front with the “arch-imperialist” Winston Churchill and leader of global capitalism Franklin Delano Roosevelt to defeat Adolf Hitler. Stalin was clear in his thinking that Nazism and fascism posed a major threat to democratic and socialist forces around the world. Indeed, after the defeat of Nazi Germany, even Churchill paid rich tribute to the Red Army and to Stalin’s visionary leadership. It is obvious that Karat is not following the Stalin line.


Indeed, Stalin himself is reported to have advised to the Indian communist delegation in 1950 that the “armed revolutionary struggle” in Telengana was unwarranted and time was not ripe for revolution in India. He said that unless a “bourgeois democratic revolution” was completed, it would be futile to launch a revolutionary uprising. And who was the medium of that democratic revolution? The Congress, under the leadership of Nehru.


Comrade Dange, head of the CPI, followed that line, while B.T. Ranadive took the strident anti-Congress line and formed the breakaway CPI(M) in 1964.


But later, in the 1980s, both the communist parties came together under the banner of the Left Front. The Left Front and the BJP had an understanding of sorts in Parliament to attack Rajiv Gandhi on the issue of Bofors. After the defeat of the Congress in 1989, the Left Front and the BJP both supported the V.P. Singh government from the outside. Can anybody say that Singh’s government would have survived even for those 11 months without the unwritten but tacit understanding between the BJP and the Left? The government only collapsed when the BJP withdrew support after L.K. Advani was arrested by chief minister Lalu Prasad Yadav in Bihar.


Yet again, the BJP and the Left Front displayed “unholy” bonhomie while opposing the Indo-US nuclear deal in 2008. Dr Manmohan Singh’s government survived without the support of the Left, and in fact, won even more seats in 2009. The Left sharply declined in the Lok Sabha and its fall continued in 2011, when in West Bengal, it was roundly routed by Mamata Banerjee.


Today, the condition of the CPI(M) is so pathetic that it has no chance of recovery even in Bengal, where it ruled for 34 years from 1977 to 2011.


Another political blunder?


After his proposal was shot down, Yechury noted in an interview that if he is condemned as “pro-Congress” because he advocated a broad anti-Modi, anti-BJP front with the Congress, his critics could be condemned as “pro-BJP”, because their line gives advantage to the Modi government.


Whether Karat calls this “inner democracy” or “factionalism” is irrelevant. The party has gone back to the same Dange-Ranadive debate which caused the split in 1964 – whether Nehru (and Indira Gandhi) were the representatives of the “bourgeois liberal democratic” forces or “running dogs of capitalism”.


Communists in India have quite often apologised for their “political mistakes”; for opposing the Quit India Movement in 1942, supporting the British effort of war, for supporting the Emergency, for endorsing and later condemning the Mao Zedong regime in China, for refusing the prime ministership offered to Jyoti Basu (at least he did, by calling it a blunder), for misreading the Telengana situation in 1949 as “ripe for revolutionary uprising” and suppressing the Naxalites in 1969.


Will Karat and the CPI(M) repent later for yet another “historic blunder” by not joining the anti-Modi, anti-BJP, anti-fascist front, and in effect, facilitating the Modi regime?


Modi and Shah must have felt relieved that there is no united alternative emerging to their government.

Friday, December 2, 2022

What Lula’s Win Means for the Opposition to Modi

 What Lula’s Win Means for the Opposition to Modi

Like Brazil under Bolsonaro, India’s democracy is facing an existential threat. But the response of most Indian political parties suggests they are oblivious to the danger posed by the BJP.


What Lula’s Win Means for the Opposition to Modi

Photo: Reuters


Jishnu Dasgupta

POLITICSWORLD

23 HOURS AGO

A bit more than two years into the first term of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Prakash Karat of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) raised quite a storm in the teacup. He argued that the Bharatiya Janata Party, under Modi, while “rightwing authoritarian”, was not “fascist”. The reason, said Karat, was that the conditions of Indian capitalism were not ripe for fascism.


The article triggered a lot of discussion on his understanding of fascism, of economics, and indeed, the model of base-superstructure that Karat was obviously following. In terms of realpolitik, it was seen as a salvo against his successor as party leader, Sitaram Yechury, and the alliance the latter had concluded with the Congress.


The theoretical point at stake was that if India faced ‘full-blown’ fascism, then the Left was duty-bound to unite with all anti- and even non-fascist forces to defeat it. Contrariwise, while it might (or not) be desirable to unite with other parties against the authoritarianism of the BJP, a united front was not mandatory. Hence, it was a matter of choice not necessity – of tactics and not strategy.


While the Left, traditionally, has felt obliged to give some kind of theoretical justification for its tactical decisions, it appears clear that many other parties also do not see the threat posed by the ‘hydra-headed’ Sangh parivar as an existential threat to Indian democracy. Even if not part of the NDA, some continue to support them in parliament (eg. the YSR Congress of Jaganmohan Reddy and the BJD of Naveen Patnaik, though KCR’s Telangana Rashtra Samiti appears to have had a change of heart) or seek to challenge the Sangh on its own agenda (eg. Kejriwal’s Aam Aadmi Party). All other opposition parties continue to jostle for space among themselves, with little or no effort to create a common space. Whatever be the lip service, the reality on the ground  is that there is no grand alliance to defeat the BJP nationally. The Index of Opposition Unity remains pitifully low, because large parts of the opposition feel no need for it.


One Brazil does not a Left wave make


After the victory of Lula da Silva in the run-off round of the presidential election in Brazil on October 30, 2022, Colombia’s first leftist president, Gustavo Petro, retweeted a triumphalist map of Latin America depicting the rise of the Left in Latin America. The resurrection of the veteran leftist Lula (who described himself as having been buried alive) and the defeat of the far-right extremist Jair Bolsonaro justifiably brought much joy to the Left. But it is fallacious to read into the Brazil result signs of a clear trend, internationally or even regionally.


To be clear, there is no global pattern of an ascendant Left, or even a regression of the Right. Social Democrats have won in Germany and in Australia and retained power in Denmark, but Jacinda Ardern’s hold in New Zealand appears wobbly at best. Sweden will have its first government with neo-Fascist elements and Italy its first government led by a neo-Fascist. In Hungary, Viktor Orban has crushed all opposition again, while Vladimir Putin in Russia and the Law and Justice Party in Poland appear as unshakable as ever. There are no signs of Erdoğan weakening in Turkey. Philippines has reinstated the memory and the son of the erstwhile dictator, Marcos. Just last week, Benjamin Netanyahu has staged a comeback in Israel, and the most far-right formation in that country’s history is poised to assume power. From the junta in Myanmar to the theocrats of Iran and the nationalists in Thailand, dissent-crushing remains a favourite activity. The Arab Spring has all but vanished from memory. Other forms of dictatorship, such as Xi Jinping’s in China and Kim Jong Il’s in North Korea, MBS in Saudi Arabia and Assad in Syria continue to tighten their nooses. In France, Marine Le Pen’s National Rally drew more votes than any ultra-right formation in history. In the UK, the Tories are yet to lose power.


And in the (still) lone superpower, Trumpism is alive and kicking. Despite the predicted right-wing ‘wave’ failing to materialise, hundreds of election-denying, misogynist, homophobic, violence-encouraging Republicans have been elected at the state and federal levels, and their party has recaptured the House of Representatives. Trump himself has announced he will run again for president in 2024; even if he is not nominated by his party, the equally stridently rightist Ron DeSantis is considered the other Republican front runner.


The Left in Latin America is not homogeneous


In Latin America itself, there is no uniform shade of pink or red. The leftist regimes being celebrated include the annoyingly conservative AMLO in Mexico, the Communist successors of Castro in Cuba, the Bolivarian governments in Venezuela and Bolivia, the former guerrilla Petro in Colombia, and the self-proclaimed “coolest dictator in the world”, Nayib Bukele of El Salvador.


Lula’s victory, too, is in no way that of an unalloyed left, like the trade unionist’s first triumph in 2003. Lula himself had sought to distance himself from the ‘church-destroying’ regimes of Venezuela and Cuba on the campaign trail, reminding voters of his long-standing relationship with the church. He even assured the church leaders that he was personally against abortion and would remain neutral in any legislative move in this regard. He also picked long time rival (though on the centre left) Geraldo Alckmin as his running mate. Moreover, the threat to democracy posed by Bolsonaro drew support from sections historically inimical to the left. Thus, the campaign for a citizen’s manifesto denouncing Bolsonaro as a wannabe dictator that was signed by hundreds of thousands of Brazilians in August was led by people from various walks and hues – politicians, environmental and indigenous activists, artists, academics, but also impresarios and industrialists. Simone Tebet, the Liberal candidate who came third in the first round of the presidential elections, also played an active part in the runoff, often campaigning in person with Lula – all to protect democracy.


Another key to the victory is provided by the Uruguayan political scientist Andres Malamud. He pointed out that since 2018, while the Left have won in six out of eleven elections in Latin America, the opposition won in ten out of eleven. “More than ideology, it’s because voters are fed up”, he wrote.


The scenario in India


In India, we have been told from the noughties, anti-incumbency no longer works. Chief ministers have been re-elected in numerous states, supposedly based on their work. The UPA win in 2009 marked the appearance of this pro-incumbency on the national stage, when Manmohan Singh became the first prime minister since Jawaharlal Nehru to be re-elected after completing a full term. So, are Indians less prone to being fed up than their Latin American counterparts? Is that why Bill Clinton campaign’s famous maxim, “the economy, stupid” did not work in India in 2019? Or is it that the opposition remains pitifully weak and thus unable to press home the advantages of anti-incumbency?


The BJP has continued its winning run in state after state. It has either won elections or gobbled up opposition governments in Haryana, Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh and the North East. The intimidation of opposition politicians by investigative agencies, the power of corporates and of corporate media, the scare tactics of mobs in the streets and trolls on the net make for a formidable combination indeed, especially when deployed alongside a strong political organisation backed by RSS cadre. Even if the opposition, or large chunks of it, unite, it is not clear whether they would win or not.


Against this backdrop, it should be evident that the question or dilemma that Prakash Karat posed, and with which this article began, was a false and irrelevant one.


When Karat’s article was first published, a democratic and firmly anti-communal student of mine was aghast. What emerged in an ‘outside the classroom’ discussion was that he and his friends thought Karat’s position was nothing but ideological chicanery.


If there is an obligation to explain one’s tactical position in ideological terms, they argued, surely there is an even greater ethical imperative to recognise and respond to the greatest challenge the republic has faced since its founding, when the future of the constitution and democracy is under a cloud. Whether you call this ‘fascism’ or not, the political obligation is to fight and fight unitedly. And this holds true for all those claiming to be opposed to the RSS-BJP. The struggle might be uphill, but the alternative is to fall into an abyss. I had to agree.


At the very least, politicians should not be allowed to claim that they do not know the consequences of surrender, compromise, kowtowing or petty squabbling. They must be asked clearly, loudly and repeatedly where they stand – on the side of democracy and the republic, or against it? They must, along with all people who value democracy, secularism and the idea of India, take a stand.


Jishnu Dasgupta is an Assistant Professor in the Department of History, Serampore College.