Editorial:-
Election 2014 is done and dusted and Pawan Chamling has led
Sikkim Democratic Front to a record fifth term in office in Sikkim. This is no
mean achievement since Mr. Chamling battled a strong anti-establishment wave
which had gripped the entire country and was palpable in Sikkim as well.
Hamstrung by an uninspiring next rung of leaders and a fourth term in office
which was arguably among the most unexceptional five years of SDF in government
in Sikkim, the fact that he managed to keep his traditional stronghold in the
districts intact is an impressive feat. It is obvious that the country as a
whole has been in a very foul mood for a few years now and has expressed it in
such displays as the India Against Corruption movement, the humbling of traditional
political parties in the NCT of Delhi and now in the viciousness with which
Congress and its UPA has been decimated across the country. Sikkim was clearly
not untouched by this mood [not Modi] of the country and this was clear in the
wave that Gangtok pushed in support of the SKM. Who knows, if SKM had not
remained so consistently indecisive and routinely delayed, it might have made
deeper inroads into the SDF bastion. But that was not to be, and it would also
be unfair to credit the SDF victory too much to SKM dithering. It is clear that
Chamling enjoys the trust of a majority of the Sikkimese and although the party
and his own vote-share has seen a dip, it remains clear that many more
Sikkimese would have him at the helm of affairs in the State than those who do
not endorse his stewardship. Sample this, SDF received 55% of all the votes
polled this time while SKM received 40%. Compare this to the 38% voteshare that
has brought Modi to power in India [despite the fact that 62% of the voters
don’t want BJP in power in India]. To have managed such clear electoral victory
for a fifth time through a campaign which was more contesting, brutal and
violent than Sikkim has seen at least in the past 15 years is why the
congratulations are even more special for Mr. Chamling and his party this time.
Congratulations are also due to the SKM on its impressive
debut, as are thanks for having returned the prospect of Opposition
representation to the Legislative Assembly of Sikkim. It is important that the
party move past the negativity of its poll campaign and engage the policy
making process and its mandated role in the Assembly and Sikkim politics with
consistent responsibility. Voters in Sikkim have returned Opposition MLAs to
the Assembly in the past, but have always been let down by the elected
Opposition members who dodged attending the sessions and skipped attending to
their constituencies. The present set of 10 SKM MLAs should deliver better and
the task should not be too difficult for them given that all of them are East
Sikkim based and that too from the cluster adjoining the capital. The party is
fortunate that its president won from one of his chosen constituencies and
should use his experience to groom Assembly debutantes well on their role in
representative democracy. From hereon forward, the focus should be on
engagement and not confrontation for the party. It cannot ignore the fact that
it was probably blanked out from the districts for the aggression and violence
that it had become identified with; a trait which could also have convinced
Gangtok that a wave of support had built up for SKM. The party then has to work
hard to merit the people’s decision to make them the Opposition and also
fashion a new introduction for itself to win wider acceptance.
Returning to the victors; one cannot help but suspect that
the SDF has not realized how significant its achievement has been. Save CPM’s
Jyoti Basu in West Bengal, no Chief Minister has returned to office five times
consecutively. Nearly 70,000 of the voters in this time’s election in Sikkim
were born when SDF was already in power here. The party’s back to back 31/32
and 32/32 poll performance had clearly made the party and its leaders and cadre
complacent which is why it was so rattled by the SKM challenge this time. 32/32
is also not a feat that can [or should] be repeated too often and the downside
is that after this peak, every shift is a loss. 22/32 and a 55% voteshare is a
significant achievement and deserves wider celebration than the party is
allowing itself. This is a chance for the SDF to get back into shape. It should
remember that arguably its best term in office was the 1999-2004 term when
Bhandari was still a force to reckon with and a pressure which gave Sikkim its
most proactive and ambitious governments. SDF had won the 1999 elections with
53% of the votes and 24 seats. It is an almost similar performance this time.
The party had delivered a governance so effective that time that it improved
its voteshare to 71% in the next elections in 2004. Election 2014 has served
Mr. Chamling and his party the same nudge. The coming days will reveal what
comes of this situation. In the meanwhile, congratulations once again…
No comments:
Post a Comment
Readers are invited to comment on, criticise, run down, even appreciate if they like something in this blog. Comments carrying abusive/ indecorous language and personal attacks, except when against the people working on this blog, will be deleted. It will be exciting for all to enjoy some earnest debates on this blog...