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Black boxes
The Indian Express :
The dissonance is eye-catching. Political parties that do the work of democracy — by selecting candidates, mobilising electorates, formulating agendas and passing laws — remain internally undemocratic. There is no transparency about the ways in which they arrive at crucial decisions; the criteria they use are unclear or left to the discretion of one or a few leaders. But what is even more striking than the absence of democracy within party structures — with the notable exception of the Left parties, which can be accused of centralisation of power rather than its concentration — is the scant attention it habitually receives. Politicians and the people occasionally throw up schemes of constitutional reform. But they rarely acknowledge that many of the problems they are worried about — from the fragmentation of the party system and its ethnification, to the waning of accountability despite the high turnover of incumbents, to the declining quality of public deliberation, especially in Parliament — feed upon the same absence.
Do we need a law to regulate the inner working of our parties? That is not the question perhaps. What we need is a more questioning and less complacent political culture that shines a light on the insides of institutions. If we treat parties like black boxes, there are incentives for them to continue to behave in opaque ways. We need to be less tolerant about the culture of the “unanimous election”, be it in the Congress or the BJP version of the same. We need to hold the newer caste- and region-based parties to account. If it is to hold and develop, the narrative of the deepening of India’s democracy needs some crucial caveats.
editor@expressindia.com
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