September-October 1999

 

The Farce Called Election

 

The dog-fights within the Indian ruling classes have reached a new peak notwithstanding the anti-Pak war hysteria, the Kargil "victory", the high-pitch frenzy and appeals for national unity. The consensus that was sought to be achieved and acclaimed to have been achieved, afterall, proved illusory and short-lived.

In fact, even at the height of the Kargil operation, the various ruling class political parties were playing politics, each trying to outwit the other in whipping up nationalist frenzy, playing up the sentiments of the people as the corpses of the soldiers arrived back home — all with the aim of garnering more votes in the ensuing elections. Now that the Kargil operation is over, the intra - and inter - party fights have intensified to a feverish pitch. Even as people are increasingly getting disillusioned with the various ruling class parties and the parliamentary system itself, the reactionary media is trying desperately to refurbish the image of parliamentary democracy by sensationalising the electoral politics, drawing the attention of the people through head-line stories out of trivialities such as Sonia Vs Sushma, Advani Vs Seshan and so on; everything possible is being done to bring the people out of their apathy and indifference towards the third general election in a span of three years — the ruling class circus that had frittered away atleast Rs. 10,000 crores of the people’s money in just three years in their power games.

Statistics are churned out day in and day out: that India is the largest practising democracy, that it has a mind-boggling 600 million-odd voters; so on and so forth. But how does this democracy (meaning rule by the majority) operate in practice ?

Firstly, out of the 600 million-odd voters, the actual voter turn-out is a mere 50-55% of the total voters i.e., about 330 million voters actually exercise their vote. These votes, in turn, are divided among an umpteen number of parties. Even if the single largest party gets a third of the votes polled, it would amount to about 100 million. By securing just a sixth of the total votes, a party claims to secure the mandate of the majority to lord it over the entire population ! Thus the party with a minority vote rules over the majority. But even these votes are not secured based on principles or on the conscious choice by the voters. Money power, caste, religion, region, race, gender — virtually every unscrupulous means is used to lure the voter. Rigging and using brute force to capture booths are widely practised under the eyes of the election commission-appointed officials. Liquor flows like water as election day draws near. It is these factors that actually decide the poll outcome. If all these are taken into account, the winning party would perhaps get less than a tenth of the total votes for the "politics" it is supposed to represent! And a large part of even these votes are acquired by luring the people with high-sounding but empty promises.

Even more significant is the manner in which the entire state machinery is set into motion — the armed forces, the para-military and the police, the bureaucracy, the electronic and print media in the control of the government or the big business, etc — are all used to the maximum possible extent to push through the electoral farce. Day in and day out the media propagates how one should exercise one’s "democratic" right to vote for the party/candidate of one’s choice; that the responsible citizen should defeat the designs of the "terrorists", and other "anti-social" and "anti-national" elements to disrupt the "democratic" process; so on and so forth.

In several parts of the country, voting is ensured at gun-point; in Kashmir, North East, AP, Bihar, the central Indian region of Dandakaranya and other places where people refuse to take part in the so-called democratic farce, threats, intimidation and a few "encounters" of activists of the nationality and revolutionary movements would ensure a "free and fair" poll in the largest democracy in the world. In these regions, in almost every election it is the state’s armed forces which actually conduct the campaign. Contesting candidates hardly venture into the countryside; their job is taken up by the state. In thousands of villages, people are threatened that if they do not vote, all facilities to their villages would be withdrawn; bus services would be withdrawn, ration-shops would be closed, bank loans would be stopped, power-supply would be cut off, all construction work would stop and all social welfare programmes would be scrapped. Besides, in several villages, the activists in thousands find themselves behind bars until the curtain drops on the electoral drama.

The polling day becomes a day of white terror. People who are still not cowed down by these measures are dragged to the polling booths, their hands are checked for the indelible ink to see whether they had voted. To cap it all, where people unitedly resist the police threats and refuse to vote, all parties, or whichever party has a biggest armed gang in the concerned village, stamp the ballot papers with the connivance of the polling agents and police. That is how the polling percentage goes up to unbelievable figures in the strongholds of the various parties that give the call for boycott. In the villages from where the leaders of these organisations hail, poll percentage goes up even higher, upto even 90%, while the regional average would be half of that.

Such is the democratic farce called election !

Elections are used by the ruling classes as a democratic garb to cover their hideous fascist features. Now a days, they are using them as a means to subvert democratic and revolutionary movements. Wherever nationalist, democratic and revolutionary movements give a call for poll boycott in pursuance of their just demands or goals, a hue and cry is raised that the democratic process is being threatened and wide propaganda is unleashed that elections would decide whether the people are in favour of the "terrorists" or "extremists", or, are aspiring for a "democratic" transformation. Thus if the Kashmiri, Assamese, Naga, Mizo, Manipuri or any nationality opts for boycott in their struggle for self-determination, the state sees to it that elections are held at gun-point, installs a government which is said to have been "democratically" elected and claims that the people are not in favour of the struggle for national self-determination and that it is only a handful of "terrorists" who are putting forth such a demand.

Likewise, in the areas where the people’s war is raging and the people are in favour of rejection of the electoral farce, as in Telangana and other parts of AP, parts of central and south Bihar, Dandakaranya, and other regions under the influence of communist revolutionaries, the ruling classes, by using all means at their disposal as mentioned above, ensure a higher percentage. Then a vicious propaganda is unleashed that the fiasco of the boycott call proves that the communist revolutionaries have no mass base and that the revolutionary movement itself is the domain of a handful of frustrated individuals. Then there are fervent appeals to the revolutionaries and those "misguided" by the latter to join the "main stream" of the democratic process i.e., to participate in the electoral farce and thereby prove their support among the masses. Elections are thus sought to be used by the ruling classes and their representative parties and the state to discredit democratic, nationality and revolutionary movements. The media, being controlled by the ruling classes, sees that these farcical claims are dinned into the ears of the gullible people and the facts are suppressed.

If this farcical and tragic (for many) electoral drama is enacted by the ruling classes, it is even more amusing to see some of the so-called revolutionary and ML parties too partaking in this farce thereby aiding the nefarious schemes of the ruling classes. "Liberation", "New Democracy", PCC, various factions going by the nomenclature of UCCRI(ML) and Janashakti, and such others have joined this "main stream" of ruling class politics long ago. The latest to realise the futility of staying out of this "mainstream" and which jumped into the farcical drama is the Red Flag group. It has waved the white flag even before it actually began armed struggle. Its high-sounding call to the people in the current election is to vote for its "anti-imperialist, democratic alternative". All these parties swearing by Marxism-Leninism-Mao Tsetung Thought and yet getting bogged down in parliamentarism, are actually helping the reactionaries in giving a new lease of life to the moribund, parasitic and anti-people parliamentary system and are diverting the people from the path of struggle for their genuine liberation.

Today, more than ever before, there is an urgent need for exposing the electoral farce, the nature of parliamentary democracy, the power games of the ruling class parties, the opportunism of the revisionists and those in the ML camp, and to propagate the revolutionary alternative of building organs of people’s democratic state power, of intensifying the ongoing people’s war and extending it to more regions in the country.

Parliament in India is a repressive institution of the big landlords and comprador big bourgeoisie who are in league with imperialism; it acts as a tool to get a legal sanction to the policies that serve the class interests of the above-mentioned enemies of the people. It has no relevance to the Indian masses at this juncture. Intensifying and extending the people’s war and building people’s own genuine representative institutions is the only alternative.

 

<Top>

 

Home  |  Current Issue  |  Archives  |  Revolutionary Publications  |  Links  |  Subscription