Delhi Revolution: Aam Aadmi wins Assembly vote, promises
corruption-free India!
-DR. ABDUL RUFF
COLACHAL
_______________
The progress and
development and growth of a nation is determined not by number of
billionaires it has produced, nor by number
of tall buildings decorating the major corporatist towns,
nor even by gold reserves of the nation, or strong GDP, but rather
by the success of the regime in protecting the poor and less
fortunate ones from the economic onslaught of the
rich exploiting the national resources as well as the poor and
ordinary masses for their private enterprises.
In simple language,
nation’s prestige is defined by the standards of life of poor and ordinary
people. How the regime protects the genuine interests of common masses should
showcase the nation’s domestic and foreign status.
In this respect,
needless to state that, India is a failed nation as it has been protecting the
capitalist interests of the rich at home and abroad while the president,
premier and ministers keep visiting foreign countries with a sac full of
domestic capitalists in the plane to strike deals for them. .
And the rich
continue to thrive while the poor and ordinary masses keep toiling and
suffering.
It is under such
nefarious circumstances that the Aam Aadmi Party emerged as the defender of
these sections of India.
AAP caught the mood
of the masses, the imagination of nation while framing its program briefly
after its emergence in Delhi state, the capital of India.
And the
grateful people of India, representing the youth of the nation overwhelmingly
voted the AAP power in Delhi, sideling their favorite national parties
including Congress and Hindutva BJP.
After fulfilling its two main
electoral promises on water and electricity bill, the Aam Aadmi Party
government faced a crucial test in the assembly on 02 December when it must
prove it has the support of the majority in the 70-member house. With
Congress, which has eight MLAs, maintaining it would provide "outside
support" to the government, and JD(U) MLA Shoaib Iqbal also declaring his
support, AAP was expected to easily sail through comfortably with its 28 MLAs.
The Arvind Kejriwal-led AAP
government with
its own 28 MLAs on 02nd January
won the trust vote in the Delhi Assembly with 38 votes (2 votes more than the
required half way mark) being cast in the government's favor.
After winning the confidence
vote, Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal, in his trademark style, congratulated Delhi's
common man. "It is not our victory. It is your victory. This is the
victory of honesty and truth," he said. He then went on to renew his
oath-taking pitch, saying that there is a big challenge ahead - a challenge
that the government with its seven ministers alone, or 70 MLAs in the
Parliament can't face. "It is a challenge that we have to undertake
together. We have to make sure that there is no corruption in the city. I
assure you that be it the MCD, be it the former Delhi government, be it our
government, no minister guilty of corruption will be spared."
People’s victory
Addressing the Delhi Assembly
before seeking the trust vote, Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal made it clear
that his intention was to work for the common people and the motion of
confidence if passed favorably will help the ordinary citizen living in the national
capital. AAP
believes that all people who need an honest system are common man no matter
wherever they stay -- Greater Kailash or Sangan Vihar. “I haven't stood here to save the government or
make a government. I never thought that I will form a political party and fight
elections. I am just a common man with no standing”.
A common man in India wants
that his children get good education, safety for his family and a good
judiciary. Crores and crores of money have been spent for development but where
is the development and where is the money? A common man wants to know that. The
quality of education is really bad in the government schools in Delhi. The
system of donation in the private schools must stop and the number of
government schools must be increased.
The country's common man just want that the corrupt should face the law and go
behind bars. But the political leaders by dint of muscle and money power
challenged and forced the common man to get themselves elected and make their
own law. “Our fight is to end corruption and we are here today. Our fight
looked impossible and victory was a distant dream. For us 28 in the Delhi
assembly, God in whatever form he is, is with us. Today's question is who are
the members who are with the Aam Aadmi?
The answer is: common people who suffered
the political gimmicks of ruling elites for decades. The new
CM said: “I have waited in red signals and lost no time in the last five-six
days”. "Is a common man's time not valuable like a VIP, a minister's?
Delhi should be a
full-fledged state to get maximum benefits of the Delhiites.
There are complaints that the
electric meters run really fast. This should be checked into. There should also
be an audit of the distribution firms and we all must sit together and fix the
power tariff. "We need to look into unauthorised colonies as these are
devoid of basic facilities. These facilities should be given until a permanent
solution is found. Same stands for illegal shanties. "The contractors are
also a tormented lot as their PFs are cut but not deposited into their
accounts. This must stop. We oppose FDI in retail. 99 percent of the business
people are honest and they are ready to pay tax. Why should the government keep
chasing them always and not allow them to commit themselves into their
business? "
Inclusive society
The CM Kejriwal said: "We are not here
to make or save this government," he said before winning a trust vote.
"This is about a war against corruption." It was Kejriwal's
uncompromising emphasis on expunging graft and what he describes as "VIP
culture" from politics that enabled his less than one-year-old Aam Aadmi
Party or AAP to land an improbable second place in last month's election.
Why a political leader does
need security? The day God decides that you should not get any more security,
no amount of bodyguards will be able to save you. Delhi has a Lokayukta law.
But that is very weak. We need to have a stronger one. What is the point in
laying and relaying footpaths? There is no dearth of money in India, in Delhi.
People should rather have streetlights for the safety of people- women.
"There should be a special team for the safety of women. Our legal
system should be such that the perpetrators who commit crimes against women are
behind bars within six months.
AAP MLAs had gone and met
several pavement dwellers and heard their woes. "These people have
nothing. They are not even vote banks - they don't have the right to vote,
denied basics of life. . So, we announced porta cabins for them. Immediately
after, some NGOs, rotary clubs called up and said that they wanted to pay for
the setting up of some porta cabins. This is how we want to include the society
for its own good," said Kejriwal.
In his speech in the Delhi Assembly
yesterday, Arvind Kejriwal, the 45-year-old chief minister of Delhi,
deftly displayed the political vocabulary that powered his outsized
victory in the recent elections.
Now on
The is a clear shift if
political focus. Kejriwal said AAP leaders are here not here for
power but to serve the masses who were deprived of their dignity in
the country.
Politics
of anger has given way now to politics of hope. After the Delhi elections, it
has become clear to voters that the Congress is no longer the force it was. Its
demise is certain. So, people have already started looking beyond the Congress
now.
The Aam Aadmi
Party’s success in Delhi and the public reaction to it has established Kejriwal
as the new hope of India, the spot Modi was occupying just a few weeks ago.
Capitalist
ideology as well as Illegal mining in which the BJP is fully
engaged have clearly spoiled their image as a
Hindutva party let lone a pro-people party. Delhi has clearly
put both Congress and BJP on the deadly back foot. The Congress is no longer
the BJP’s biggest problem, Arvind Kejriwal is. Narendra Modi also is now seriously
worrying about Arvind Kejriwal. For the past few months, Modi has been raging
against the Congress and its leaders. The Congress is dead for now. Modi’s
mission has been accomplished. He needs to stop, think and take note of the new
challenge.
But the right wing BJP has
become another Congress, corrupt party. In fact, BJP is more dangerous than Congress. Very dangerous for
the country! Imagine the combo of Nitin Gadkari, Amit Shah, Yeddyrappa and Modi
ruling with the blessings of ASSaram Bapu..which of our women folk will be
safe! Congress is corrupt (a bit communal because RSS elements have
infiltrated the party) but BJP is both corrupt and communal.
Modi’s other problem is that
he is unacceptable to a significant portion of the electorate. There are people
who would never vote for Modi even if he gets clean chits from every possible
court or expresses his anguish over 2002 in a million words. Kejriwal, on the
other hand, has no such problem. Unlike Modi, he is not seen as a divisive
leader and doesn’t evoke strong likes and dislikes
Kejriwal has a lot going for him. He is not just a politician or a chief
minister any more. Kejriwal has attained the status of the moral and
intellectual leader of a huge section of India. Modi may be a mass leader, a
proven administrator, a master tactician and a great orator, but when it comes
to being the country’s guiding light, he can’t compete with Kejriwal. The
problem with Modi is that he can’t be Kejriwal. Kejriwal. . Kejriwal’s past
record is now his biggest strength. Notice the irony: Kejriwal is getting ready
to live up to his legend.
Kejriwal
is now setting the agenda with his ideals, ideas, promises and symbolism.
Others are just playing catch-up. The focus has suddenly shifted from Modi.
People are now watching Kejriwal with great curiosity and expectations.
Of
course, having lost their faces in Delhi, both the BJP and the Congress are
hoping that Kejriwal would fail and AAP would fall,. After
some “fun”. But he is going to succeed. If Kejriwal delivers on
some of his promises and creates a difference, he would suddenly emerge as
competition for Modi and his biggest poll planks: Development and good
governance.
If
and when the AAP decides to expand outside Delhi, the BJP will have to face a
new heavy headache. In most of the north Indian states, Kejriwal’s party can
emerge as an alternative to the Congress, throwing it out even before the
election. When that happens, the contest would be between the BJP and the AAP,
a scenario Modi may have not considered yet while focusing all his energy on
the Congress. A large section of voters rooting for Modi is from among people
who are angry with the Congress. Till recently they had no choice but to vote
for the BJP to defeat the Congress.
But
now Aam Aadmi Party has come to the fore to represent common men.
BJP MLAs objected to the use
of AAP caps, however the secretariat pointed out the caps were harmless and
merely said "mein aam admi hoon"(I am also a common man). Most senior
officers were in no mood to go against the party that has seized the
imagination of the common man for now.
However, as Congress leaders
remained huddled over countering AAP's claims on fulfilling its major poll
promises quickly enough, their support is likely to come with some stinging
rhetoric.
Meanwhile,
obviously unable to stand the growing popularity of the Common-man’s party
(AAP), a public interest litigation was filed in the Delhi High Court on
02nd December soon after the AAP government won the confidence
vote in the Assembly, seeking directions to the CBI to register a case of
cheating and corruption against Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal for misleading
citizens by making "false promises in election manifesto". The
PIL alleged that they misled Delhi citizens by making false promises
in the AAP election manifesto in their bid to enjoy power and benefits. It also
questioned the AAP government's statement on reducing electricity charge by 50
percent from Jan 1.
It said the AAP
government failed to set up the Jan Lokpal by Dec 29 as promised in the poll
manifesto. The plea said the court needs to decide the issue of false
declaration by "misusing chief minister's office for political gain
amounted to corruption". The PIL asked the court to decide as to whether
making false declarations in the election manifesto to secure votes of the
public amounted to cheating and criminal breach of trust.
Social
crusader Anna Hazare congratulated Arvind Kejriwal on being sworn in as the
chief minister of Delhi. Hazare said, "We have worked together for
several years and I know him well. I am confident that he will do a good job as
the chief minister." He also asked Kejriwal to pass on his best
wishes to all the ministers in his cabinet. Kejriwal, who was a key
member of Hazare's erstwhile Team Anna, had telephoned the Gandhian on Friday
morning to invite him to his swearing-in ceremony. An official invitation was
also e mailed to Hazare. Hazare is unwell.
Future
December 02 is a big day
for the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) as Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal proved
the majority of his government today in the Delhi Assembly. His party is
surging ahead in implementing all poll promises, one by one.
After the confidence vote, AAP will now
face a tougher task when the House elects a new speaker and deputy speaker.
While AAP has chosen MS Dhir as its candidate for the speaker's post, the BJP
appears all set to field its candidate. Congress has not yet decided its stand
on the matter, adding to the uncertainty.
The AAP's next most important
agenda will be to pass the Janlokpal Bill for Delhi.
AAP is likely to widen its scope and reach
to other states very soon.
Right
now, outside the national capital, Kejriwal and his team do not even have a
presence. They have very little time to start and build up a team before May.
In Delhi, the AAP got almost a year to become a viable option. It has just
three months to register its presence in the other states. But it isn’t
impossible either.
If
the AAP can do it in Delhi, replicating the story in other parts of India would
not be impossible. If his government and its populist agenda succeed in Delhi,
if Kejriwal implements some of his promises, if he retains his position on the
podium of morality, ethics and honesty and if his party manages to mount a
challenge outside Delhi, Kejriwal would become difficult to stop.
The Aam Aadmi Party emerged with flying colors in the Delhi elections with 28
seats, sweeping out the Congress and even Sheila Dikshit from the opposition
benches. While the exit polls had said that AAP won't get majority votes, none
of the exit poll of polls had really given so many seats to AAP.
All these years after the
India obtained independence in 1947, Indian politicians have been helping
themselves and their friends and families in the name of serving the nation.
The AAP has shown that if
there is a will, strong enough, it is easy to help the common people, removing
their miseries one by one.
Sadly, owing to dirty politics
of major national parties, politics has been corpotarised in India today and
Indian capital Delhi displayed demoralized corruption and money
power all these years. .
Till
the Delhi polls, the AAP was just a subject of curiosity. Except for those who
voted for it, nobody believed it could form the government in Delhi. Now that
it has happened, people have suspended their disbelief. They now believe that
if Delhi can, India can too.
AAP would become a strong
national party with regional bases. Unfortunately a few news portals are
not happy that their favorite parties like Congress and BJP have lost power in
Delhi what looks like on a permanent basis.
Delhi
Revolution-2: Aam Aadmi Party to contest parliamentary polls
-DR. ABDUL
RUFF COLACHAL
_______________
Armed with
successful elections for the party in Delhi elections through peaceful
anti-corruption movement, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) now, rightly so, is
planning to field positive candidates for the March-May polls for the
Parliament. The AAP has announced on 4th December
that it will contest most seats in the upcoming Lok Sabha election.
Senior AAP leader
and a top advocate of Supreme Court, Prashant Bhushan said the
decision was taken at the start of a two-day, national executive meeting
following the popular response across the country after the AAP took power in
Delhi. "AAP will fight the Lok Sabha election, contest in the maximum
number of states, and in as many seats as possible," he told the media
here. He said the AAP will field candidates wherever "we have a reasonable
(party) structure and we get good candidates".
For the AAP now, no
party is its target for criticism but the political rot gathered in
Indian polity and governance over decades would generally be the focus of
the campaign of the party. Another AAP leader added that the
decision to enter the Lok Sabha battle had nothing to do with other political
parties. "We have made it clear that we have no alliance with the Congress
in Delhi. "We are not fighting elections to harm or benefit anyone,"
he said.
The AAP does not
see any difference whether the AAP decision to contest the parliament poll
harmed or benefited BJP's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi or Congress
vice president Rahul Gandhi who is being projected as its PM
candidate even as the incumbent PM Manmohan Singh has refused to leave the high
office though he also has supported Rahul Gandhi to be his successor
if Congress come back to power.
Aam
Admi Party seeks to save and help the people of India by winning
parliament poll and ruling the nation on
their behalf. The party wants to make India
corruption free.
Bhushan
sounded extremely confident about the prospects of the Aam Aadmi Party in the
forthcoming general elections and said that there is now a very real chance
that AAP may be able to form the next government at the centre. "One month
ago I felt that we may be able to win around 50 seats in the general elections.
But after forming the government in Delhi the response that we are getting from
across the country is beyond our imagination. No limit can be drawn on the
number of seats that AAP can win.
An
optimistic Bhushan added: “Why just a simple majority, the Aam Aadmi Party
could even end up with over 400 seats."
Bhushan drew a parallel with the 1977 elections held after the emergency and
said that there is a wave of positive change that is blowing across the country
and people now believe that AAP can clean up the corrupt politics of the
country.
Bhushan
said, "Indira Gandhi revoked the emergency in January 1977 and called
general elections in March. Who would have thought that in two months the
Janata Party would be able to field candidates on every seat and that the
Congress would be decimated across north India. Once people make up
their minds then anything is possible."
Of
course, later the Janata Partye to bickering from selfish leaders of
the national coalition who claimed to b e more democrats
than the rest, collapsed and disintegrated and out of which the BJP
was born, taking with it many people from other parties.
Since
anti-corruption issue continues guide the party and leaders,
perhaps, the AAP could avert any divisions and collapse.
That
the Common-man’s party (Aam Aadmi Party) had refused to hurry up to form the
government without enough seats on their own and with help of other independent
MLAs and waited to assume the rule of the responsible opposition
party. But the Congress party, seeking to keep the BJP out of power
in Delhi, extended support to AAP to make a government.
And
the AAP government under the CM Kejriwal and supported by many top
leaders, including Hazare and Bhushan has begun
fulfilling all electoral promises has generated over a short span of
time can stand it in the parliamentary poll as well. .
Aam
Admi with its simple image would make spectacular inroads into national polity
very quickly and win the polls in future, starting with Parliamentary test.
.
After
winning the Delhi test, obviously the AAP feels confident of
wining the Parliament also.
|