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Opinion
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JD (United) splits again
BY WALKING OUT of the Janata Dal (United) with his brother and
two other MPs to form another party, Mr. Ram Vilas Paswan has
indicated again that the Janata Dal was put together as a party
in 1988 more to serve the interests of a set of leaders than for
any lofty political principles. The enthusiasm that Mr. Paswan
displayed in emphasising the rationale of the formation of this
new party did not reflect differences over the JD(U)'s political
line but was the result of the ``differences'' he had with the
party's president, Mr. Sharad Yadav. Products of the churning
that the political process went through in the late 1960s and the
early 1970s, both Mr. Paswan and Mr. Yadav were emerging as the
second line of leadership in the Janata Dal particularly after
Mr. V. P. Singh began withdrawing from the mainstream. They were
among those in the Janata Dal along with Mr. Laloo Prasad Yadav
who were instrumental in committing the party completely to a
political course emphasising social justice much against the
wishes of such other leaders in the fold as Mr. Ramakrishna Hegde
and Biju Patnaik; it is another matter that these three leaders
reduced the Janata Dal to a single issue party and also rendered
the idea of social justice a mere slogan.
And as had been the ``tradition'' of the anti-Congress political
platform, these leaders were unable to stick together for long.
If Mr. Paswan and Mr. Sharad Yadav got together in 1997 only in
order to oust Mr. Laloo Yadav (a spill-over of the turf war in
Bihar) the unity even at that stage was innocent of ideology; it
was, indeed, a matter of convenience. Mr. Paswan was never at
ease with Mr. Sharad Yadav as president of the party. And if it
took him so long to walk out of the fold, it was only because he
failed all these days to manage a third MP (apart from his own
brother Mr. Ramachandra Paswan and Mr. Jainarain Prasad Nishad
who had agreed even earlier to challenge Mr. Sharad Yadav's
leadership) to accept his leadership. Mr. Paswan may have
succeeded in managing the requisite strength to escape
disqualification under the provisions of the anti-defection Act
at this stage; but then, it remains to be seen if at least a
couple of those who have left the Janata Dal(U) to join the Jan
Shakti will remain in the new party for long. After all, such a
coming together of MPs from the Janata Dal, only to break away
once again (and thus manage to retain membership and the
privileges of being a member of the Legislature), was seen in the
past too; Mr. Ajit Singh walked out of the party with as many as
20 MPs in 1992 (a third of the 60-strong contingent in the Lok
Sabha then) and a group of seven MPs from among them crossing
over to the Congress at the next opportune moment in July 1993.
A matter for concern in all this is that it lends itself to the
growing perception that the political process is becoming nothing
but a tactical course adopted by a set of people bent on self-
preservation. This retreat of politics, taking place at a time
when corruption and malfeasance of public funds are widespread at
all levels of the political structure and the civil
administration is seen as becoming increasingly insensitive to
the aspirations of the society, is certainly not in the interests
of the democratic structure. It is one thing for such leaders as
Mr. Sharad Yadav and Mr. Paswan to quarrel as to who among them
can take on Mr. Laloo Yadav in Bihar. But the manner in which
they have conducted themselves in the recent past does not hold
anything to show that they were unduly troubled by the plight of
the people of Bihar.
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