Political malady and legal remedy – The Hindu Editorial with vocab - September 19, 2016
Those looking for loopholes are
always one step ahead of those seeking to plug them. For decades, since the
‘aaya ram, gaya ram’ days of Indian politics, Parliament and courts have been coming down on mass defection and
frequent change of party loyalties. But no piece of legislation is a deterrent
when politicians, for what are usually self-serving reasons, decide to switch
parties. After the Supreme Court restored the Congress government in Arunachal Pradesh in July, most of the party’s MLAs
returned under the leadership of a new Chief Minister, Pema Khandu. But, in a
couple of months, they have again deserted the Congress to join the People’s
Party of Arunachal, a constituent of the North-East Democratic Alliance, a front led by the Bharatiya Janata Party. The reason adduced for the switchover is
laughable: to have better relations with the BJP-led government at the Centre.
In effect what the MLAs have done is get over the legal hurdles to defection. Once the Supreme Court
restored the Congress government of Nabam Tuki, those who had deserted the
party returned on condition that Mr. Khandu, and not Mr. Tuki, be the Chief
Minister. This must have seemed the easiest way to stay in power for those who
had allied with the earlier government of Congress rebels led by Kalikho Pul.
Now, in a replay of the mass defection, the Congress rebels have taken care to
play by the book. There is no unseating of the government, no withdrawal of
support by the ruling party’s MLAs. Instead, the change is neat and clean, from
a Congress government to a pro-BJP PPA government. The Governor had no role;
and a legal challenge to the realignment is made that much more difficult.
Several legislative efforts have been made to curb (to control) defections. The 52nd
Constitution Amendment provided for disqualification of defectors other
than in the case of a split in the party, involving a group of not less than
one-third of its members. A later amendment disallowed splits, and provided
only for merger in cases where at least two-thirds of the members of one party
merged with another party. This too did not prove to be a deterrent, as has
been evident in Arunachal Pradesh. True, defections engineered through unscrupulous means undermine democratic
institutions and subvert the
people’s mandate. But, so far, the cure for this malady in the form of
legislation does not seem to have had any effect. When defection is made more
difficult, the means adopted become even more inventive. Ideally, the matter of
dealing with defection should be left in the hands of the voters. Legal
remedies to what is essentially a political issue will never work.
malady / noun - a problem within a system or
organization
legal remedy legal
a way of solving a problem or ordering someone to
make a payment for harm or damage they have caused, using a decision made in a
law court
come down on sb/sth —
phrasal verb - to punish or criticize a person or activity very strongly
deterrent / / noun - something that deters people from doing
something
deter / verb - to prevent someone from doing
something or to make someone less enthusiastic about doing something by making
it difficult for them to do it or by threatening bad results if they do it
legislation // noun - a law or set of laws suggested by a government
and made official by a parliament
adduce / verb - to give reasons why you think
something is true
defection / noun-the act of leaving a
country, political party, etc. to go to another one
unscrupulous // adjective - behaving in a way
that is dishonest or unfair in order to get what you want
subvert // verb - to try to destroy or damage
something, especially an established political system
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