Reference Text
Time Left10:00
When
the
NDA
coalition
took
office,
we
were
assured
that
the
BJP's
latent
communalism
had
now
been
checked
and
those
giants
of
secularism
as
George
Fernandes
would
restrain
the
Hindu
fanatics.
But
nothing
of
this
sort
could
be
seen.
Such
experiences
prove
that
coalitions
tend
to
work
against
India's
interest.
The
big
advantage
claimed
for
coalition
politics
that
it
leads
to
moderation
and
consensus
is
entirely
illusory.
And
all
the
obivous
disadvantages
the
squabbling
for
births,
the
slow
pace
of
decision
making,
the
absence
of
a
clear
ideology
etc.
far
out
way
any
possible
advantages.
Much
worse,
these
days
is
the
nature
of
the
parties
that
any
coalition
will
have
to
contain.
The
sad
truth
is
that
nearly
any
party
in
India
today
is
built
not
around
ideology
but
around
the
personality
of
a
single
leader
or
a
family
dynasty.
In
some
cases
the
leader's
charisma
is
reinforced
by
caste
calculation.
Every
party
is
based
on
charisma
and
family.
Few,
if
any,
of
these
parties
actually
believe
in
any
thing.
A
nearly
every
case
there
is
no
inner
party
democracy.
No
new
leaders
will
ever
emerge
from
their
ranks.
Success
and
succession
are
decided
only
by
birth.
When
we
talk
of
coalition
politics
of
the
centre
we
are
not
really
talking
about
a
coalition
of
such
parties
as
the
Congress,
the
BJP
or
the
CPM.
To
reach
the
majority
figure,
every
coalition
must
include
M.P.'s
from
several
of
these
parties,
many
of
whom
will
have
to
be
made
minister.
Thus
it
does
not
matter
how
much
one
party
hates
another,
how
much
one
support
the
other's
ideologies.
The
only
concern
for
them
is
that
how
many
MPs
the
party
has.
None
of
this
can
be
good
for
India.
As
our
polity
fractures
into
regional
dynasty
and
caste
based
parties,
all
Central
Governments
have
to
bow
to
the
demands
of
these
regional
dictators,
their
sons,
their
cronies
and
their
criminal
friends.
When
these
parties
get
to
send
ministers
to
Delhi,
all
they
care
about
state
concern
and
regional
issues.
None
of
them
have
any
vision
of
India
or
any
commitment
to
the
well
being
of
the
entire
country.
Hence
coalition
is
not
a
healthy
diet
for
the
India
masses.
When
the
NDA
coalition
took
office,
we
were
assured
that
the
BJP's
latent
communalism
had
now
been
checked
and
those
giants
of
secularism
as
George
Fernandes
would
restrain
the
Hindu
fanatics.
But
nothing
of
this
sort
could
be
seen.
Such
experiences
prove
that
coalitions
tend
to
work
against
India's
interest.
The
big
advantage
claimed
for
coalition
politics
that
it
leads
to
moderation
and
consensus
is
entirely
illusory.
And
all
the
obivous
disadvantages
the
squabbling
for
births,
the
slow
pace
of
decision
making,