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http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/arti...380143.cms
Do we have a prime minister?
Author: C P Bhambhri, The Economic Times
Date: January 21, 2006
Introduction: <b>The office of the PM in the UPA government has been
seriously devalued. Dr Singh is shouldering responsibilities without
real power and Sonia Gandhi has power without responsibility.</b>
Parliamentary democracy in England or Canada or Australia has in reality
become a prime ministerial government and the office of the PM has
evolved from the status of primus inter pares or first among equals to
the present position of the leadership of the Cabinet and elected House
of Parliament.
The council of ministers is collectively responsible to the elected
House of Parliament, but in reality the writ of the PM runs over all the
members of his Cabinet. Not only this. The PM can ask for the
resignation or even the dismissal of a dissident member of his council
of ministers because appointment of a minister is his sole prerogative.
The PM can act as an unquestioned leader of his council of ministers if
he enjoys the unquestioned political authority over his own party.
Unfortunately, Dr Manmohan Singh is a PM nominated by Sonia Gandhi, who
is the real and unquestioned leader of the Congress party which is
leading the UPA government at the Centre. Dr Singh is not even a light
weight leader of the Congress; the real repository of power is Sonia
Gandhi who is the president of the Congress and the chairman of the
National Advisory Council. Not only this, every coalition partner of the
UPA looks towards her as the final arbiter of disputes or differences
between the Congress party and its coalition partners.
The Communist parties, supporting the Congress-led UPA government from
outside, look towards Sonia for their coordination with the Dr Singh-led
government. It is noteworthy that Pranab Mukerjee, or P Chidambaram or
Arjun Singh, or Kamal Nath of the Congress party care for the opinions
and wishes of the PM because Sonia Gandhi, the supreme leader of the
Congress, is supporting Dr Singh in his present position.
The Congress CMs too look towards Sonia Gandhi and not Dr Singh, for
guidance, advice, instructions and orders. It is Sonia Gandhi who
decides to hold meetings of Congress CMs and they have to explain their
record of activities to her and not the nominated PM. A telling example
is provided by the manner in which Natwar Singh, the former external
affairs minister, was made to 'quit' the Cabinet because Sonia Gandhi
had got annoyed with her own favourite minister in the Volcker Affair.
Natwar Singh was shown the door not by Dr Singh, but by Sonia.
The upshot of the above description is that the PM has no authority or
freedom to exercise his real prerogative of either appointing a minister
or in asking for his resignation. The Congress party representatives in
Dr Singh's Cabinet can continue at the 'pleasure' of Sonia and not on
the basis of choice or goodwill of the PM. The essential point to be
noted here is that Dr Singh is shinning in the reflected glory of Sonia.
He is in office because of his 'loyalty' to Sonia.
Jawaharlal Nehru or Indira Gandhi or Rajiv Gandhi or Narasimha Rao or
Atal Bihari Vajpayee were not only PMs in their own right, they
controlled the party organisation. Complete support of a party is a
precondition for becoming a PM in a parliamentary democracy. It is not
without reason that Jawaharlal Nehru threatened to resign from the CWC
if Purushottam Das Tandon continued as party president. The clash and
conflict between these two personalities was resolved in favour of the
PM and the party president was made to quit his elected office.
Indira Gandhi decided to 'split' the Congress party in 1969 when the
party president Nijalingappa had ganged up against her on the choice of
the party nominee for the post of President of India. Indira Gandhi
again 'split' the party in 1978 because a powerful section within the
party was 'hostile' to her. In fact, every Congress PM, except Dr Singh,
had been either the unquestioned and unchallenged choice of the party or
managed and manipulated party support in his/her favour.
A PM has to 'control' his party for his authority to be fully accepted
by every minister in his Cabinet. Indira Gandhi fought against her
opponents within the party because her authority as PM would have been
completely diluted, even eroded, if she had allowed parallel or 'dual'
centres of power. It is not without reason that V P Singh or Chandra
Shekhar or H D Deve Gowda or I K Gujaral could remain PMs only for a
very short period because none of them had either firm support of a
party or a coalition of parties.
Mr Vajpayee could remain PM from 1998 to 2004 because he was fully
supported not only by the BJP but also other coalition partners. In
other words, a PM is effective only on the basis of his own political
strength within the party of which he is the leader.
Dr Singh is not the leader of the Congress or of the UPA and hence he
cannot lead the council of ministers. <b>It has been observed that every
pubic controversy involving the UPA government is resolved by the active
intervention of Sonia Gandhi and not the PM.</b> He does not have any role
in the party's internal affairs because Sonia has the real power. The
functioning of the government is also affected by such an unnatural
'dual control system' because <b>every party or group in the UPA looks
towards Sonia for the final word.</b>
The Left parties had walked out and boycotted the coordination committee
meetings in the middle of 2005 because they had developed serious
differences with the UPA government on economic policies of
liberalisation, globalisation and privatisation and it was Sonia Gandhi's
intervention which bought back the Left to the co-oordination committee
meetings.
<b>Sonia Gandhi's National Advisory Council carries more weight in decision
making than Dr Singh and it had become clear on the issue of National
Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme and the Right to Information Act
2005. It deserves to be reiterated that the office of the PM in the UPA
government has been completely devalued. It is not only that Dr Singh
owes his job to Sonia, all Congress ministers look towards Sonia for
their continuation in office. Sonia has power without responsibility and
Dr Singh is shouldering responsibilities without real power.</b>
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