Stray Thoughts on
Elections
By
Zubair Ahmed
Andaman and Nicobar
Islands is one constituency among the 543 Lok Sabha constituencies of India.
One of the hardest and toughest constituency spread over 700 kms from the
Southern tip Campbell Bay to the Northern tip Diglipur, is a nightmare for any
candidate to cover and make their presence felt.
Every political party -
national and regional have a miniscule presence in the Islands. But, how much
the national parties care about the Islands is quite obvious from the way list
of candidates are announced.
Elections in the Islands
is slated for 10th April and there is less than a month left and one of the
major political parties, BJP is yet to announce its candidate. In the last
elections, Congress had the same fate.
People residing in Andaman
and Nicobar Islands might be eager to know whether Aam Aadmi Party, the party
that represents new politics is keen in contesting elections from the Islands.
But, there is no news from Delhi.
Why should political
parties care about a single seat, when they conveniently ignore states like
Manipur, Sikkim and Arunachal Pradesh with more than 2-3 seats.
Moreover, how significant is
an MP for the Islands, when he doesn't have any say in the policy decisions. On
what basis can one assess performance of an MP from the Islands - the no. of
questions he asked in the Parliament or the amount he spent from MPLAD? Do we
need an MP for these? A RTI application can get answer to any question and Rs 5
crores in five years can be made available to the Deputy Commissioner for equal
and even distribution without any discrimination.
Why is there no
anti-incumbency factor in the case of the sitting MP? How can one gauge him
when he cannot be held responsible for anything that happened in the last five
years? If the same question be poised for the bureaucrats or Lieutenant
Governors, there can be a big list of achievements and failures. And,
unfortunately we do not have a say in their selection.
If the reason is that he
is a public representative and part of the democratic system, he needs to be
empowered and placed above the bureaucracy, so that decisions are routed
through him, where he has the power to vet them.
A Member of Parliament cannot
be relegated to a petition writer placing demands which can be accepted or
rejected without any reason. More than respect, the Member of Parliament deserves
authority and power to act. Or else, the whole exercise of people electing
their representative does not make any sense. When people repose faith on an
individual and elect him, they expect him to perform. Or the best option would
be to nominate or appoint an MP like the bureaucrats and the Administrator.
Unfortunately, bureaucrats
and the Administrator are more powerful than the Member of Parliament elected
by the citizens of this territory.
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