Showing posts with label Sardar Patel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sardar Patel. Show all posts

Saturday, 12 September 2015

From dusty to dirty poll campaigns - anatomy of political communication


By S.Narendra
Former Information Adviser to PM, Principal Information Officer
to Government and Spokesperson

(Political communication is the oxygen of democracy like India. It can sustain political institutions of a parliamentary democracy and empower the people as its responsible participants, as demonstrated by the first generation of leaders of independent India. India became a Republic on January 26th 1950. In a formal sense, the nation embarked on a new political journey that was bound to be marked by electoral battles and power politics. The leading lights of the freedom movement, who can be regarded as the founders of the new nation had donned the role of ageing  guardians who were in a hurry to secure the hard won freedom  by ringing it with political institutions, appropriate political conventions and traditions. There were both open and covert political contests among them and honest ideological schisms. The national movement called the INC had become a political party in quest of power. This formidable monolith was showing faint signs of cracking. This process had unleashed political communication of many hues.... Read on --- the third installment)

The world’s longest written Constitution was a done deal, and India became a Republic on 26th January 1956. Unlike the contemporary new constitution of Japan, (known as Gen. McArthur’s constitution) this document, debated with much passion and light, was a totally an Indian product. Soon after, the Constituent Assembly had converted itself into an interim Parliament and transacted some momentous legislative business. From the political communication angle, the RPA or the Representation of The People’s Act set the rules for the conduct of first elections in early 1952 and provided the platform for the functioning of the political parties and their political communication.

Another piece of most remarkable but highly controversial draft legislation was the Hindu Code Bill. This was a daring social reform attempt that touched literally a holy cow -the customary Hindu Law. Remarkably, it was spear-headed by two Brahmin leaders -Nehru and Rajaji - and a dalit Dr.B.R.Ambedkar. The heat generated by this attempt to deal with the Hindu marriage, inheritance, status of women raised as storm of protest from inside, led by the president of the  Interim parliament Rajendra Prasad and Sardar Patel. Outside, the orthodox priests, scholars and Hindu organisations cried foul. The RSS (banned in the wake of Gandhiji’s assassination) and the Hindu Mahasabha took up the fight to the streets. The Muslims became apprehensive over demands for a uniform civil code in place of a Hindu Code. There were public protests  and effigies of Nehru were burnt.
In the end, the prime minister gave in to the chorus of protest and the Bill could not become the Law. A disillusioned Dr.Ambedkar, the most brilliant law minister India ever had, quit the government and later formed his own  Scheduled Castes Federation, thus marking the launch of political communication from the dalit aspect. It is another story that the new parliament constituted after the general elections once again took up the Hindu Code Bill, but it was broken up into several legislations mainly to soften the opposition aroused by the earlier  comprehensive  Bill.  There was robust debate and finally the legislations were passed. The first President of India Dr.Rajendra Prasad had toyed with the idea of withholding his assent to the Bills. The newspapers dutifully reported the disagreement between the government and the President but did not take sides. And finally, Dr.Prasad, did not press his disagreement further and signed the Bill, making it into a historic  social reform  Act.
A moot point to ponder in this context is  whether such a law treading  on the  religious sentiments would have gone through peacefully if India of those times had 24x7 TV news channels. The short notable point was that the instruments of mediated political communication were rudimentary.

The Election and Political Education: Aptly described by foreign media as India’s biggest gamble, the first general elections held in early 1952 were unprecedented in its scale of operations. Over the years, the poll operations have only grown in size, complexity ,noise and colour. The poll process and the campaign have themselves turned into the medium and the message of political communication.
Only looking at the official logistical arrangements made then (1952), there were unique communication elements for overcoming  the prevailing mass illiteracy (85%) and even the absence of communication infrastructure. The political parties were assigned unique symbols for identification by voters to overcome the problem of illiterary. Unlike the present elections, there were individual ballot boxes for each party with its symbol. The very fact that at present Voting machine have replaced the ballot box itself shows the long democratic stride India has made. The Election Commission produced AV or audio-visual communication in the form of documentary films for educating the voters on how to exercise their ballots. The radio valiantly tried to supplement but its reach was limited.  From the time of its setting up, the Commission took almost one year to prepare for the polls. The mobilisation  of the general government staff such as teachers, clerks  and other government staff  and training them in conducting free and fair elections was another gigantic communication input.  

The political campaign adopted the communication methods, such as rallies, and public address, tried and tested during the freedom movement. People thronged to hear their heroes of the movement. The prime minister, who had by then wrested the Congress presidentship, led the campaign not just on behalf of his INC but for rallying the people behind the ballot box. The vigour of the opposition campaign could not be quelled by Nehru and INC juggernaut, as could be seen by the election results.
While ‘historians record the fact that Nehru’s Congress won a two-thirds majority in a House of 525 members, they failed to recognise the significance of  the opposition winning  more than 100 plus seats against severe odds. It was not a walk-over for INC, that speaks volumes for the effectiveness of political communication from the opposition parties.
The first general elections was held when there was no Gandhi  or Sardar Patel. They both passed away. Patel had out-manoeuvred Nehru on two crucial occasions. The first was in getting Dr.Rajendra Prasad elected as the first President of India. The prime minister’s wanted to nominate C.Rajagopalachari (Rajaji). Before Nehru could recover from this set back, both Patel and Dr.Prasad  got their nominee –Purushottam Das Tandon-elected as the Congress president at AICC session at Bangalore. The prime minister was more than upset by this choice, as he considered the new party president as a traditional conservative.
Contrast this with the AICC session held at the same venue almost 20 years later (1969), when Indira Gandhi was the prime minister. Following the 1969 AICC session, there were daily attacks against the Congress president and her supporters  like Kamaraj, Morarji Desai, S.K.Patil, A.P.Jain and others (branded as Syndicate), and counter attacks. There were mid-night media leaks of letters exchanged by the rival factions in order to gain prominence in the morning newspapers. Unlike Nehru who conceded the presidentship of India to Dr.Prasad, Mrs Gandhi chose to put up her own candidate, V.V.Giri in opposition to the party nomiee-Neelam  Sanjeev Reddy. This was the first and last time (thus far), the election to the office of the president of India generated not only political heat but exchange of polemics by proxies working for the rival candidates. The media chose to be part of this partisan war. On the daily newspapers front, the Patriot (started by left party stalwarts like Aruna Asaf Ali,Sripad Dange)  batted  for V.V Giri and the Indian Express took up the cause of the other side. The Bombay based tabloid weeklies like the Blitz of Rusi  Karanjia and  the Current edited by the redoubtable D.F Karaka battled it out, spitting much venom. Mrs Gandhi after getting Giri to Rastrapati Bhavan,   also split the party.
In contrast, Indira’s father bid his time and made the party president’ s tenure so difficult that the latter was forced to  resign. Patel was not around and Dr.Rajendra Prasad as the president of the country could not intervene. Nehru assumed the party presidentship before the general elections. From the political communication point of view, it was a very strategic move by the prime minister, as he became the biggest vote catcher for INC. A political commentator wryly remarked that ‘even a lamp- post could get elected, if it stood for election under the INC  banner’.
The prime minister Nehru undertook a whirl wind campaign (that could  matched by his daughter during the 1971 campaign and a comparable effort that comes to mind is that of Narendra Modi election campaign of 2013-14) covering almost 24,000 miles. Rarely the prime minister attacked other political parties or their leaders. Of course, at that stage of India’s politics, Nehru need not have had to attack his rivals. Most of them were his comrades in INC until recently. The prime minister was essentially engaged in selling his dream of India, as a nation anxious to put its poverty and illiteracy behind through the magic wand of centralised planning and destined to play a leading role on the world stage. The media followed the prime minister everywhere and every word he uttered was printed, faithfully. As mentioned by the historian Ramachandra Guha, a scribe compared Nehru’s election campaign to that of Samudra Gupta’s (patriarch of Gupta dynasty) campaign for conquest.

A little before  the elections,  a few new parties took birth. Except the CPI or the Communist
The author
sunarendra@gmail.com
party, all others including the Bharatiya Jana Sangh (BJS) were founded by ex–Congress leaders. The Communists had established a strong base in Telangana, that had witnessed much violence. As they were perceived to have sided with the British rule, their image was not very positive. Senior leaders of the Congress such as Jayaprakash Narain, J.B.Kripalani left INC to form their own socialist parties, as they felt that Nehru was not sufficiently socialist in his economic thinking. Shyama Prasad Mukherji of West Bengal broke away to found the BJS. At the state level also the INC faced  dissensions as there were political tussels for power. Although the birth of new parties was triggered by personality clashes, the political communication that emanated  during  this period was devoid of personal  attacks. No one questioned each other’s integrity or sincerity of purpose.

How I got the scoop on Gandhi’s assassination!

I received severe spankings from my mother. As an eight year old boy, I used to play football (with used Tennis balls) with my friends in a park near our house in Mysore. We used to see older boys and men gathering near our play area and hoist a flag every evening. 

After hoisting the flag, they would engage in vigorous exercises that used to end with a chorus of songs. Before dispersing some of them would come to meet our foot-ball team and spend time in telling us stories of Shivaji, Rana Pratap, and tales from Ramayana and Mahabharata. On some festival days they would distribute candies.




On the evening of Janruay 29th, this group of men sat with us for a while and distributed Laddoos. We heard from them that Gandhiji will be no more. As I returned home, I told my mother, who was fond of telling me stories about Gandhiji (we had a big picture of him in our drawing room) that I heard Gandhiji will be no more.  She instantaneously began to beat me and admonished me not to say inauspicious things. I received more beating the next day when my brother rushed home around 6’O clock and informed my mother about Gandhiji’s assassination.
On hindsight, I keep wondering as to how the news of a plot to kill Gandhiji could have travelled all the way to Mysore. Or was it a political communication of another kind!



Morarji Desai & the Art of Silence as Communication
From July 14th to 19th  1969 evening, I was at No.5 Rajendraq Prasad Road, the residence of Morarji Desai, then Deputy prime minister and finance minister. I was his information officer and was asked to be present at his house from morning to till late in the evening for media relations. On the 14th afternoon, PTI flashed that the prime minister had relieved Morarji Desai of his finance portfolio. Without wasting any time Desai got into his private car and drove home.
The media persons, some of the biggest names in contemporary journalism, would visit Morarji Desai throughout the day. All of them would bring latest news of some personal attack against him or the other  from the prime minister’s camp and expected Moraji Desai to react. His standard response was:’ I have nothing to say.If some has attacked me, please ask them the reason for it’.
He would receive every journalist warmly, speak to each one but refrained from making any adverse comments.
Desai also said: ‘it is the prime minister’s prerogative to appoint ministers. So also her prerogative to remove them’.
He called me to his room and thanked me and instructed me not to continue my vigil at his house, as he was no longer in government.
(From Desai’s residence, I rushed to the office of the Economic Affairs Secretary Dr.I.G.Patel to get a briefing on bank nationalisation that  followed. That is a separate story)

Wednesday, 26 August 2015

When you didn’t have to shout to be heard!


  • Golden Era of Political Communication
  • No acrimony, bitterness despite fiercest political battles
  • Kahaan Gaye Woh Log & Kahan Gaye Who Standards?

By S.Narendra

(Former Information Adviser to PM, Principal Information Officer
to the government, & Spokesperson)


That Political Communication (PC) from the leadership to the people and within the political channels stuck to the highest standards of democratic dialogue and debate was largely because of their schooling under Gandhiji during the decades of freedom movement. Almost all of them from the central to provincial leadership were highly (mostly western and English) educated and influenced by the British parliamentary traditions. Several of the leaders were in their own right were social reformers as well. Never before or after, at one point in history, India could boast of having a galaxy of leadership as erudite, eminent and principled as this.
The nation was fortunate that they were at the helm of affairs at this tipping point when India destiny had to be shaped.  Each page of the documents that record the debates that took place in the Constituent Assembly that was deliberating on the new Constitution of India showcases the best and brightest in Indian politics. An unwavering commitment to creating an ideal democracy and work for the realisation of a shared vision guided them and their participation in PC.

The political communication during these critical formative years was sufficiently strained and tested by most tragic and volatile political events. There were also transformative political developments. Together, they not only originated PC  on their own but they also had to be supported and moderated by  sane PC. The following is an overview of events and developments which were central to the political discourse of the times.
1.    The partition unleashed a communal holocaust. The population exodus and influx, marked by unprecedented communal violence had filled the air with hatred and intolerance. Both Muslim and Hindu organisations were engaged in PC for inflaming passions across the land.
2.    Massive celebrations for marking the Independence day from the midnight of August 14th to 15th in Delhi and elsewhere  were held under the shadow of partition and mass killings of people moving from one country to another. Yet the Prime Minister Jawahar Lal Nehru’s stirring speech - ‘when the  world sleeps, India  awakes to a new freedom’  - and his famous ‘Tryst with Destiny’ set the tone for PC relating to the nation building tasks, especially preserving its unity. And this overarching watchfulness against divisive forces runs through India’s PC from here onwards.
3.    Ganhdiji who had won the freedom for us did not want to take part in these celebrations and went on fasting in Calcutta for convincing the Hindus and Muslims to give up mutual killing. The PC relating to violence in one part of the country was travelling fast and triggering a wave of riots. This was without the aid of mass media (that we are blessed with, today!).
4.    The PC from the government was focused on containing and stopping such violence and its spread through rumours. As described by a British general in Calcutta commanding the army deployed to deal with commercial riots, Gandhiji was a one-man army that brought peace where his troops had failed. Gandhiji’s fasting as a penance became the medium and the message and worked successfully for ending violence where official PC had failed. If you see this section in the film Gandhi, you would know what I mean. Not only the two warring communities agreed to give up violence in response to Gandhi’s fasting but it also made the prime ministers of India (Nehru) and Pakistan (Liaquat Ali Khan) visit Gandhiji in Calcutta and issue a joint appeal for peace.

5.    Gandhiji was opposed to partition; so aslo Dr.Rajendra Prasad, Maulana Abul Kalam Azad and many others who were part of the new governing team in Delhi. None of them raked up their differences in public for polarising the public opinion. It is recorded history that Sardar Vallabhai Patel  and Jawaharlala Nehru, two staunch soldiers of Gandhiji, had disagreed on most matters and both were contenders for the post of the prime ministership. However, when Gandhiji anointed Nehru for the post Sardar worked under him. A photograph of the  famous handshake between the two leaders across the personality of Gandhiji speaks volumes for PC. Neither side tried to reduce it to a mere photo-op (as one would experience today!) and lived and worked to honour its spirit. The volumes containing the correspondence between the two bring out the firmness with which each expressed his views on matters of great importance as well as the politeness and courtesies extended to   each other. And there were few media leaks that could have soured the relationship.
4.    On August 15th, the area directly administered by the British government had become free. Nearly 700 princely states were yet to be integrated into the Indian government. States like Mysore, Hyderabad, Junagad, Kashmir, Travancore were prominent in defying the call for an end to princely rule and integrate with India. The freedom movement was continuing in these states and AIR became an important channel of the new government for political communication. When Sardar Patel  had to resort to police  action  in Hyderabad to persuade the Nizam to integrate his state with India, two kinds of political  communication were required, One was to reassure the people of the state that the government would intervene to support their struggle. Another was to warn the Nizam to trifle with India. A marauding group called Razkars supporting the Nizam and attacking the majority community that required to be dealt with; Another was to address the people in the rest of India who were eager to see how the new government would deal with mini-crisis. The AIR became the handmaiden of PC in those critical days.
5.    Another development requiring PC at home and abroad was the first Kashmir war that began in October 1947 when Pakistan sent tribal militias to Kashmir.  The Maharaja of J&K Hari Singh, seeking Indian assistance, acceded to India, But soon regular armies of India and Paksitan were engaged in fighting, and the dispute was taken to the UN by India. J&K’s undisputed leader them was Sheikh Abdulla, who was the principal initiator of PC in Kashmir. Nehru and Abdullah were the main voices heard by the rest of India and people abroad. The attempt in PC was to present India as a responsible member of the UN, a victim of aggression yet seeking a peaceful solution to a problem caused by a neighbour. It is notable that in PC the element of propaganda and was far lower than what transpired during the subsequent Indo-Pak wars. 

6.    A very significant stream of PC related to the making of the new Constitution. The elegant and erudite debates taking place in the Constituent assembly were copiously reported in the English news papers. The meaning of the debates was often lost in translation in the regional media. One does not know how much of the import of such debates were understood by the population, 85% of which were illiterate.
7.    The shortages that had surfaced during World War II were becoming acute by the day. Rationing of food and other essential items had continued. Now that the nation gained Independence and the freedom struggle had ended, an unprecedented admiration for certain leaders sprang up in every nook and corner of the counry. The people had invested great trust in the Indian National Congress as a movement, correspondingly in its leaders. Their credibility was high among the people. This was reflected on the walls of huts in villages and homes in small cities with people proudly displaying the photographs of  Gandhi, Nehru, Subhas Chnadra Bose, Sardar Patel, Dr.Ambedkar and many others  whom despite many people never seeing them in person. Many would even use pictures from the newspapers to show their admiration for their leaders.
8.    The Indian National Congress was a very extensive as well as powerful channels for PC during the freedom movement. It continued to retain its credibility and following in this golden era of PC. Most of the ministers in government in Delhi and other parts were former freedom fighters and members of INC. The halo effect of INC showed its big and not so big leaders in the best light and added to the credibility of the PC of the day. As far as the people were concerned, Delhi was far but not Gandhi-Nehru and the local leaders were assumed to be their followers, hence trust-worthy.

9.    An interesting feature of PC of that time of transition was its attempts to focus on India’s foreign relations. Nehru himself was steering this PC and was to become its most visible exponent and spokesman of the nation’s foreign policy. As early as March 1947, Nehru hosted the Asian Relations Conference, showcasing his preoccupation with foreign relations. Soon, India was taking the lead in the global campaign against colonialism that still controlled many nations. The Indo-Pak conflict had entered the UN generating its own PC. The PM’s visit abroad, particularly to USA in 1949 was big news back home. This was featured as the Indian people’s hero straddling the global stage like a colossus, making the chest of every Indian puff out with pride. The competition between the USSR and the West to sway India into their respective camps during in the cold war that was brewing (1945 to 1990)  was also responsible for greater foreign policy content in the contemporary political communication.
The author
sunarendra@gmail.com
This golden period of political communication, it should be noted, was before electoral politics entered Indian democracy. No doubt, INC and its leaders had contested elections under the British and there were bitter electoral battles within the  Congress party, but there was hardly any bitterness or acrimony. When Subhas Chandra Bose won the election to the office of the Congress presidentship (1938), much against the wishes of Gandhiji, there was palpable unpleasantness. However, they were clean political contests based on ideology and means to win freedom for India, and certainly not for winning power with selfish motives. Luckily for the country, even in provinces there were leaders who matched the stature of national leaders with a stellar record of participation in the freedom movement. The pan-India presence of INC gave a different direction to political communication. (Blog: (https//Spokesperson.blogspot)