Unused to serious thinking over policies from the viewpoint of their long-term consequences, and uninterested in the rigours of patient and persistent steps of implementation, Modi mistook grandstanding for governance.
DEMONETISATION
Two examples suffice. His most audacious decision was Demonetisation of high-value currency notes in November 2016. It put every section of society to unimaginable hardships. The worst sufferers were the poor and middle classes, who keep their meagre savings only in currency form. Modi’s misadventure caused the deaths of over 100 people. Nearly two and a half years later, can the PM tell nation how Demonetisation benefited the people or the national economy? Has his tall claim about an attack on black money, which he used to justify his decision, come true? The reality is quite the contrary. There is more cash in the economy now than before. Modi had claimed that Demonetisation would “destroy” terrorism, drug mafia, human trafficking and the underworld. Haven’t subsequent events busted his claim?
Hence, people all over the country are asking the question: What exactly did Demonetisation achieve? They are also puzzled by the fact that neither Modi nor his party men are uttering a single word about it in their election campaign. Many of them are lending a receptive ear to Rahul Gandhi when he says, “Demonetisation is the biggest scam in independent India.” If people smell something fishy and scandalous about the most important economic decision in Modi’s first term, why should they vote for him again?
GST: A SHOW OF VANITY
Introduction of GST was another decision that Modi used for his showmanship. A man of limitless vanity, he wanted to be seen in the same exalted league as Jawaharlal Nehru. So he launched GST at a special midnight session of Parliament on July 1, 2017. Sadly, whereas there was something sublime about Nehruji’s historic ‘Tryst with Destiny’ speech to the Constituent Assembly on the midnight of August 14-15, 1947, Modi’s move was banal. As subsequent angry reactions from almost all sections of trade and industry showed, Modi’s GST was highly ill-conceived and had to be repeatedly reformed.
If Demonetisation and flawed GST have achieved anything, it is a huge shrinkage of jobs in the economy. Disappointed that their hopes have been dashed, almost all sections of the common people are asking the PM, “Where are the ‘achche din’ that you had promised to bring?” This being the case, why should those who have paid a heavy price on account of Modi’s missteps reward him with a second term?
MODI MUST GO
Modi must go for three other important reasons. One, never has India seen such brazen attempts to misuse and devalue democratic institutions as in the past five years. Large sections of the media have been muzzled, and made lapdogs of Modi, his government and his party. Selective and coercive action against BJP’s opponents has become the order of the day. If Modi gets a renewed term, there is a real danger of him attempting to wreck the constitutional order. Even in the ongoing poll campaign, we have seen how the PM is trying desperately to gain electoral benefit from the actions of our Armed Forces. If his attempts go unchecked, what will happen to the neutrality of our men in uniform?
Two, never in the past has a ruling party tried so blatantly to disempower Indian Muslims, and make them live in fear by inflicting indignities on them, as Modi and his supporters have done since 2014. The PM and other BJP leaders have condoned mob lynchings of innocent Muslims with their silence. At the subterranean level, workers of the Sangh Parivar have been subtly trying to convert the anti-Pakistan sentiment in our society into an anti-Muslim sentiment. All this is being done in a well-calculated manner to create a Hindu vote bank large enough to ensure a second term to Modi.
Lastly, never since India’s Independence has a ruling party tried to divide our society between “patriots” and “anti-nationals” as Modi and his followers have done. Ludicrously, our arrogant and ignorant PM has been trying to portray the Congress as pro-Pakistan and pro-terrorists. He seems to believe that the people of India have forgotten the martyrdom of Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi, both of whom became victims of anti-India terrorists. The situation has become so toxic that even BJP’s own patriarch, LK Advani, felt it necessary to indirectly rebuke Modi by saying that political opponents should not be maligned as “enemies” and “anti-nationals”.
In view of all this, India’s jagrut voters should know that a second term to Modi would pave the way for further assaults not only on the ‘Idea of India’, but also on the ‘Idea of Indian Democracy’. Before darkness descends, it is time right now for the electorate to say: Modi must go!