Commentary/Mani Shankar Aiyar
Deve Gowda is ready to 'die for Mulayam Singh'
It is, perhaps, only natural for Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda
to heap paeans
of praise on Laloo Prasad Yadav at his garib Reilla for
commandeering numerous trucks and buses from the nearest
available transporter and gouging as much petrol and diesel as his
supporters wanted out of every passing bunk. Both Gowda and Yadav
belong, after all, to the same party. In any case, such abuse
of power has long become part of our democracy.
Moreover, Laloo surely deserves recognition for the significant
contribution he made to our ancient civilisation.
"Reilla," he has helpfully explained, "is the masculine
gender for rally!" Our national language is the richer
for Laloo's etymological exertions.
We have also had an interesting response from the United Front about the
Bharatiya Janata Party-Bahujan Samaj Party government taking office in Lucknow. The BJP-BSP
did so as the other Yadav of our Backward
Age, Mulayam Singh, refused to have any truck with Mayawati. The prime minister has announced his readiness to "die for him (Mulayam Singh)." How Deve Gowda thinks
intimations of his mortality are going to assist
Mulayamism is not clear.
Deve Gowda's solicitude for his coalition partners appears, however,
to be somewhat selective. He has displayed none of the same consideration towards the
regional parties of the two states with which his home bastion
has running water disputes. And even as Chandrababu Naidu gets
an expert committee to endorse his stand on the height of
the Almatti Dam, and the Supreme Court -- at long, long last! -- constitutes
a bench to determine whether Karnataka violated the Constitution on the Cauvery issue, Deve
Gowda has let it be known that he thinks there is no place for
courts of justice in river water disputes.
Not that other parties are any better. George Fernandes
followed the lead of his mentor Raj Narain, he of the green bandana who brought down Morarji Desai's government on the question whether it was proper for Janata Party members, specifically its Jan Sangh component, to
enjoy RSS membership. His
Samata Party is today in alliance with the BJP. And, for all
I know, George, rising at the crack of dawn,
outfits himself in a pair of khaki shorts, picks up his danda and runs off to the nearest shakha to
perform calisthenics.
A better example of political adaptability is George's nominal leader Nitish Kumar, the Kurmi Terror. When Babri Masjid was coming down, his was the wittiest voice
in Parliament. The razor sharpness of his wit did more to cut
the BJP down to size than the sledgehammer of us blood-and-thunder types.
Today, Nitish is in alliance with the Masjid marauders.
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