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BJP: Bill, but who’s Will? 
Sandhya Jain
16 Mar 2010

The Congress party’s sphinx-like supremo, who made passage of the Women’s Reservation Bill in the Rajya Sabha on International Women’s Day a matter of personal prestige, is not known for cogent analysis and articulation on any issue. This has not dissuaded acolytes from informing us, via a servile media, of the issues ‘close to madam’s heart’. Last time it was the disastrous Indo-US Nuclear Deal, the nuisance clauses of which are only beginning to unravel. That alone should have warned the BJP and Left parties from following Sonia Gandhi’s agenda for women’s empowerment.

 

But so addicted is our political class to slogans in lieu of hard thinking, that the concerned parties did not even examine the said legislation, and jumped in feet first, enforcing compliance by issuing whips after the March 8 shutdown of Parliament. Now, with murmurs of dissent rising, particularly after the disgraceful manner in which the legislation was passed on March 9 after marshals evicted obstructing members, it would be wise for BJP to rethink its commitment to the Bill.

 

But first, BJP leaders Ms Sushma Swaraj (Lok Sabha) and Arun Jaitley (Rajya Sabha) must answer why they agreed to pass the legislation in such a tearing hurry when marshals were used to evict members. What was BJP’s compulsion to abet Sonia Gandhi’s personal agenda?

 

The Women’s Bill negates one of the basic features of the constitution – the right to equality, irrespective of gender or religion, a fact further enshrined by the Supreme Court in the Keshavanand Bharti case. The Congress-led UPA-I gobbled up non-discrimination on grounds of religion by establishing an exclusive Ministry of Minority Affairs, declaring that Muslims have the first right on national resources, and setting up several schemes and institutions to cater exclusively for minorities (read Muslims).

 

The BJP should have rushed to the Supreme Court and had these quashed. But the leaders could not see beyond their own power and pelf, and the delusion that courting the Muslim vote would propel Mr. L.K. Advani into the prime minister’s chair; they completely betrayed the Hindu community.

 

BJP is now compounding its sins of omission and commission by supporting a blatantly unconstitutional legislation for political reservations on grounds of gender. Parliament has no authority to amend a basic feature of the constitution, and the legislation can be struck down by the Supreme Court. Why are political parties opening themselves to such humiliation?

 

Another pertinent question is the mystical figure of 33%. How was this arrived at when it is known that women must logically comprise over 50% of a nation’s demography (unless this is seriously disturbed by issues like female infanticide or foeticide)? Common sense suggests that far from empowering women, the legislation actually caps their power and representation, as it will be impossible for women to exceed 33% seats whenever they are ready to come to Parliament in larger numbers. This is not a small issue.

 

It will be even worse if the UPA is forced to compromise and dilute women’s reservation to say, 20%, as mooted in some quarters. This token reservation will need to be passed afresh in the Rajya Sabha, bringing us back to square one – why was the legislation moved and passed in the upper house without due debate and consultation at the national level and within political parties?  

 

The Women’s Reservation Bill is totally devoid of merit. Its greatest advocates are women who have risen in their respective parties by patronage, have no meaningful public contribution, and want to ensure that their parties do not sideline them. Indian citizens need competent representatives, not gender; hijras have won assembly elections because of this quest for leaders who deliver.

 

More pertinently, if BJP agrees to change the constitution for one group, on what grounds will it refuse extension of the reservation pie to Muslims, as envisaged by the National Commission for Religious and Linguistic Minorities (Ranganath Mishra Commission)? And what if Sonia Gandhi is rushing the Women’s Bill precisely because she knows the Minority quota is impossible, and intends to use the women’s quota as a de facto Muslim Quota?

 

This means that once 33% quota for women is law, Congress can give tickets only to Muslim women and win say, 25% of the seats. These women will form a communal block in Parliament and the State Assemblies, and work for a Muslim agenda. Does BJP have a counter to this mischief? Once this happens, the supposed opposition of Maulana Saidur Rehman Azmi Nadvi of Nadva-tul Ulema to women’s reservation will vanish.

 

Actually, the sub-caste quotas demanded by Mulayam Singh and Lalu Yadav would mitigate this danger, as it would keep their Hindu votebank intact. BJP has not thought of any safeguard for the Hindu voter, having ceased to think in the Hindu interest a long time ago.

 

This is not to suggest that we accept sub-quotas for Dalit, OBCs or Muslim women. Quotas fragment societal unity; Indians now want a sharp reversal of the quota regime. Reservations have been found to promote mediocrity, and are now hurting even their intended beneficiaries who suffer at the hands of the creamy layer within their ranks. It has proved politically impossible to tackle the creamy layer; what will we do if women’s reservation ends up as the Muslim women’s reservation?

 

It is now up to the Congress to introduce the bill in the Lok Sabha and get it through. Congress is nervous as the budget has to be passed and voices of resistance have begun to be aired in the BJP. Perhaps president Nitin Gadkari is asserting himself; some say former president Rajnath Singh is instigating the revolt cum re-think. Be that as it may be, given UPA-II’s dangerous trajectory, it may be in the BJP’s best interests to use the budget session to bring down the government and throw out its divisive agenda, lock stock and barrel.

 

This would have the additional merit of effectively downsizing the Gandhi family and ending the well propagated myth that Rahul Gandhi is the future PM. Congress simply cannot win the present number of seats again in the event of an early election, not with the current price rise! Fresh elections will give Nitin Gadkari a chance to reassert Hindutva as BJP’s ideology and political manifesto.

 

The author is Editor, www.vijayvaani.com 

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  User Comments:
 
  BJP, and righteous action ? kabhi nahin! Hope Sandhyaji wakes from her dreams quickly.  
  Incognito  
  16 Mar 2010  
   
 
  Sandhya instinctively always speaks for national/Hindu interests. Hers is the voice of reason and sanity which all Indians, and particularly those claiming to represent Hindu interests must listen to.  
  avadhuth  
  16 Mar 2010  
   
 
  The fist clear article on the so-called Women's Reservation Bill--and by a woman, to boot! The Bill is unconstitutional simply because it narrows your choice even more in selecting an MP. Furthermore, all the scumbag parties like SJP, RJD, BSP will ensure further restrictions. How can any right thinking woman ask for handouts like this and then claim "liberation" ? In the current scenario, the only good sound bites are from Mohan Bhagwat; the BJP is no longer seen or heard. After the death of Pramod Mahajan, the BJP is slowly being rendered irrelevant: it has no agenda, no plan, no coherence, no cohesion. Thank you, Sandhyaji for your clarity!  
  seadog4227  
  16 Mar 2010  
   
 
  Very likely the BJP may be supporting the woman's bill (like Congress) because it feels that through such a mechanism, they will be able to further the power of "central leaders" by weakening grass-root leaders. Serves well for a party, whose top leadership is residing in Rajya Sabha.  
  Ketan  
  16 Mar 2010  
   
 
  An excellent article. Becomes more powerful coming from your keyboard.  
  Arun  
  16 Mar 2010  
   
 
  Sandhya ji, very well written article. You have a cogent point. We should not rush through.  
  Chand  
  16 Mar 2010  
   
 
  Ms Sushma Swaraj and Mr Arun Jaitley seem agent of Congress and incapable of winning elections. BJP can not win with these people as leaders.  
  Atma  
  16 Mar 2010  
   
 
  Like bollywood this will be the beginning of the system of casting couch in political parties.  
  Rama  
  16 Mar 2010  
   
 
  The 33% reservation for women will be hijacked by sycophants and those women who are in the party cadres as mere tokens of gender equality.  
  Ganesh  
  16 Mar 2010  
   
 
  Excellent analysis.... I hope BJP heeds to it.  
  Manoj Kumar  
  16 Mar 2010  
   
 
  BJP does not have the guts to stand up to Congress and will play games to stay in power. Only a return to 1984 status will make it wake up. Ditto for the RSS  
  Hinduputra  
  16 Mar 2010  
   
 
  The latest team of the BJP shows that it is a spent force. Nothing better can be expected of BJP. It is a collection of self centered individuals who occasionally give hope. I hope I am proved wrong. Unless Baba Ramdev comes up with his promised political intervention, I am afraid, Hindus are politically destitute.  
  Ram  
  16 Mar 2010  
   
 
  Ram, Baba Ramdev will only fragment the Hindu vote further. He has no real ideas of his own, and his a tool in the hands of PIOs and NRIs and desperate Indians who think that one popular man is the panacea to everything, when we need real hard thinking for the solution to our problems. He is a yoga guru and should not dilute his brand identity.  
  Hinduputra  
  16 Mar 2010  
   
 
  The Women reservation bill seems to be a pie baked in hurry. The writer has raised some important and justified questions. The case of Congress seems to be a party in a hurry for not knowing when the elections will take place. It has missed out on delivering the justice to women in the first place and now this half baked idea. The BJP too is no better, how many women are there in BJP and how many make a difference in that party too. BJP too has become Congress team B, although in a much worse shape with appeasement that beats even the congress. It is rightful to ask why not 50% and why not random seats. And the most important question will the deserving women of substance ever get a chance??/  
  arvind  
  16 Mar 2010  
   
 
  The article is right in asking the questions and what is the truth behind these bills. what is the basic agenda behind this bill. Is it an earnest effort to empower the women? will the right kind ever get elected? Is this an eye wash to divert attention from corruption in these party's and the fundamental failure of providing leadership and governance.  
  Kamakshi S  
  16 Mar 2010  
   
 
  Excellent ! the writer has asked some important questions. and there need to be answers for the same. Why and what makes the Party's see the merit in 33% reservation and not 50% As an opposition BJP has ceized to exist especially when debates and important policy matters are to be placed at the table of the House in Parliament. It takes an easy route of walk out and the bbills are passed in any case. This is shameful. We have already seen the team as announced by BJP today, which suggested it had more than the required 33%. How many have made a difference is public knowledge( Hma Malini Vani Tripathi, etc) and how many will make a difference if any new name has if at all been announced  
  Prabhu, Pune  
  16 Mar 2010  
   
 
  And the National Executive gives the game away - Kavita Khanna, wife of Vinod Khanna; Poonam Azad, wife of Kirti Azad.... The only woman they don't want to touch is Sita ji, wife of Sri Ram!!! That tells you everything you need to know about them.  
  Hinduputra  
  17 Mar 2010  
   
 
  SJ has raised very good points for the BJP to ponder about. But with the kind of media backlash against the BJP and the kind of image that is being spread about the party among the voters, if the BJP had taken an anti-women reservation stance, they would have been massacred by the media. Whatever explanations the BJP gives, it wouldnt have mattered. The media would have protrayed as though the the BJP is anti-women empowerment and steeped in medival politics. SJ does not have to face the voters. So she can bravely raise these points. It is a tough time for the BJP. Hope it comes out of its problems well. I am personally against any kind of reservation for any category. It fragmenst the society and does not unite. It is against nature.  
  S Vasan  
  17 Mar 2010  
   
 
  Congatulations Sandhya. This is a well argued article on women's reservation bill. As far as BJP's position to counter Congress in national politics is concerned, the former has lost the chance long ago--during the NDA rule itself. The BJP used to hammer about 40 years of Congress misrule. The Indian voters gave BJP a strong chance to change the national agenda for better. Unfortunately, once in power, it behaved much the same as Congress. Even the much touted slogan that it is a 'Party with a difference' and that it was committed to good governance vanished into thin air much before the 'India Shining' exposed the shallowness of its top leaders. .....  
  Bijay Kumar  
  17 Mar 2010  
   
 
  @S Vasan - you are speaking from both sides of your mouth. Either you support reservation in more and more areas and to more and more categories and fragment home and society, or you take a stand. And who said one cannot be diplomatic? All BJP had to do was ask for a political price or say wait till there is a national consensus. From Team B of Congress it has become the Team C minus.  
  Hinduputra  
  17 Mar 2010  
   
 
  Porfect points raised. Food for thought for a confused BJP. Yes, its behaviour resembles that of Sonia's "B" team. The party has been ignoring Hindus for a long long time. But surprisingly the media, particularly the MNC news agencies keep on describing the party as "Right-wing Hindu BJP"? Going by the composition of Nitin Gadkari's team announced on 16 March, I feel BJP has decided to discard its Hindutva Tag.Sandhya Ji, Gadkari is seemingly enjoying his new found position and noway keen on asserting Hindutva as BJP’s ideology and political manifesto via fresh elections.  
  Kuna Mohanty  
  17 Mar 2010  
   

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