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The dynasty factor
COMING SOMEWHAT CLOSE on the heels of elections to the State
Assembly and the Lok Sabha, the questions that the bypoll to the
two Assembly constituencies of Bhongir and Chevella in Andhra
Pradesh throw up may not be the kind that directly concern the
fortunes of different political parties. To the extent that these
are relevant, they are underpinned by the preeminence of the
personality factor in Indian politics and its real and perceived
electoral dividends. If the political interest is therefore only
marginal, it is on account of the fact that both the Telugu Desam
and the Congress(I) can expect to retain their respective seats.
This is because the leaders - A. Madhava Reddy, Minister for
Panchayat Raj, and the Congress-(I) MLA, P. Indra Reddy - whose
death caused the election were heavyweights. The broader issues
raised by the predictable decision of the two parties to field
the widows, both of whom are new entrants on the political scene,
point to the by-now accepted practice among the political classes
to sponsor the spouses, sons and daughters of prominent partymen.
Virtually every mainstream party today issues the ticket to the
kin of political heavyweights and local satraps; the exceptions
are perhaps the two communist parties. Among the factors that
account for the pervasiveness of this phenomenon must rank the
fact of individual personalities being able to command greater
credibility with the people than the parties they represent and
conversely, the heavy reliance of parties on such personalities
to ensure greater internal cohesiveness. Indeed, so significant
is the personality factor that the Telugu Desam was reportedly
wooing the Congress(I) MLA's widow with a ticket until she
decided to throw in her lot with the latter. The Congress(I) is
of course the classic example. The natural proclivity to exploit
this into electoral dividend is understandable. Such dividend as
may accrue and the consequent dependence upon it is all the more
in evidence in case of the assassination of a political
personality, forcing spouses, sons and daughters into the arena
to cash in on the sympathy vote. This is obviously different from
the process of early initiation which brings the second
generation into political prominence. An example of the latter is
someone like Mr. Stalin, present Mayor of Chennai and son of the
Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu. The Ajit Singhs, the Naveen
Patnaiks and the Omar Abdullahs of course belong to a separate
category drawn into the fray purely by the attractions of a
worthwhile family avocation.
But the party that has been singularly disparaged and accused of
nurturing dynastic aspirations is the Congress(I). This is
probably not surprising in view of the immeasureable political
mileage that the personal charisma of Jawaharlal Nehru, Indira
Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi yielded for the party, amidst the
popularity of anti-Congressism which has put a convenient gloss
on the many differences within this near-universal aspiration of
dynastic succession. But there can be no disputing the fact that
the propensity to exploit a potential sympathy vote or close
connection with a high profile leader underlies the distribution
of seats in most parties. Indeed, when the IT-savvy Chief
Minister of Andhra Pradesh, Mr. Chandrababu Naidu, plays the same
card, it is only a measure of the recognition and legitimacy, not
to speak of its utility, that the so-called dynasty factor, in
all its varied manifestations, has come to acquire in Indian
politics.
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