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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, March 15, 2001 |
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Opinion
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Laloo Yadav's troubles
WITH THE RESIGNATION of Mr. Shankar Prasad Tekriwal from the
Rabri Devi Cabinet in Bihar, the RJD supremo, Mr. Laloo Prasad
Yadav, can no longer dismiss reports of dissidence in the party
as mere tales being planted by his political rivals in the State.
That Mr. Tekriwal, among the few who had stood by Mr.Laloo Yadav
through the rough and tumble his outfit had to go through (since
he took over as Chief Minister in 1990), had decided to quit the
Cabinet is, by itself, a serious development. And it reflects the
anguish within the party over the manner in which Mr. Laloo Yadav
has been making a mockery of all the lofty principles - social
justice and responsive governance - that the platform had stood
for during the initial years it was in power. Mr. Yadav's brazen
approach to the ideal of probity in public life - when he refused
to quit as Chief Minister even after the CBI special court had
ordered his detention after charges were framed in the multi-
crore fodder scam - and the anointment of Ms. Rabri Devi as Chief
Minister after he finally agreed to quit the post make a mockery
of established canons in public life. It is a fact that Mr. Yadav
continued to hold on to the reins of power in the State reducing
several senior members of his party to insignificant positions.
The revolt by Mr. Tekriwal (who had been in the Bihar Cabinet for
11 long years) is also an expression of protest by such men of
longstanding political experience against Mr. Laloo Yadav's
attempt to reduce the party to a family affair. It may be true
that Mr. Ranjan Prasad Yadav, around whom the RJD rebels are now
gathering, was one of Mr. Laloo Yadav's managers all these years.
And in this sense, he too is guilty of all the charges against
Mr. Laloo Yadav. And if Mr. Ranjan Yadav is now rallying forces
against the Laloo-Rabri regime and organising a revolt against
them within the RJD, it could be only because he anticipates a
series of developments in the coming couple of months in the CBI
special court. Mr. Ranjan Yadav (whose following in the
legislature party continues to remain uncertain and no one is
prepared to hazard a guess at this stage) seems to have made up
his mind to go the whole hog and bid for power in the State. And
Mr. Tekriwal's decision to quit the Cabinet and announce his
support to Mr. Ranjan Yadav on grounds that he alone is committed
to the development of Bihar could be the beginning of a
substantive change in the State's political set-up. With reports
of at least a couple of more Ministers in the Rabri Devi Cabinet
having associated with Mr. Tekriwal, Mr. Laloo Yadav can no
longer gloss over the developments within his party. The slender
majority that the ruling coalition consisting of the RJD, the
Congress(I) and the left parties enjoy in the State Assembly
makes things more difficult for Mr.Laloo Yadav.
Be that as it may, there is another aspect to the goings-on
within the RJD that is of concern. And that is the prospect of
the RJD rebels making common cause with the NDA or at least with
sections within the NDA. That Mr. Ranjan Yadav will have to
depend for his survival on sections from within the NDA is a
fact. After all, there is no way he can take the entire RJD
legislature party with him. And it is this reality that must
cause some serious concern. The task of governance, which had
taken a beating in Bihar even otherwise, could be the first
casualty in the event of any such change as is likely to emerge
in Bihar in the given context. Apart from being an unstable
coalition brought together on a one-point agenda (to get rid of
Mr. Laloo Yadav), any dispensation by the RJD rebels that will
depend on groups within the NDA for its very survival can only
lead to chaos.
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