Reference Text
Time Left10:00
The
era
of
coalition
has
come
to
stay
as
a
reality.
In
such
a
situation
the
coalition
parties.
Having
divergent
views
on
various
issues
have
to
agree
to
a
common
minimum
programmed
acceptable
to
all
the
parties
in
the
coalition.
They
have
to
steer
clear
of
the
controversial
issues
and
agree
to
a
common
minimum
programme
in
the
interest
of
stability
of
the
government.
The
country
cannot
afford
elections
every
year.
Experience
has
now
shown
that
a
coalition
government
can
run
as
smoothly
as
any
single
party
government.
The
only
requirement
is
that
the
coalition
partners
have
to
stick
to
a
code
of
conduct.
Every
coalition
party
has
to
own
the
responsibility
for
all
government
policies
or
actions.
No
partner
is
expected
to
air
the
views
of
a
particular
group
in
public.
All
differences
must
be
referred
to
the
coordinating
group
set
up
to
coordinate
and
accommodate
the
views
of
the
coalition
partners.
No
party
or
person
in
a
coalition
government
must
also
act
like
the
head
of
a
family
and
respect
the
views
of
all
the
parties
making
up
the
coalition.
A
coalition
government
has
its
flaws
and
failings
also.
Firstly
no
single
party
can
act
on
its
own
to
implement
its
own
policies
and
programmes
as
declared
loudly
during
the
election
campaign.
The
B.J.P.
for
example
had
to
give
up
its
declared
stand
during
the
NDA
rule
(1999
2004)
on
Uniform
Civil
Code
the
Ayodhya
Temple
and
Article
370
in
Kashmir
to
set
up
a
coalition
government.
Similarly
the
new
government
of
UPA
led
by
the
Congress
Party
has
also
given
up
its
stand
on
various
issues
and
decided
to
work
on
an
agreed
CMP
(Common
Minimum
Programme).
Secondly
a
coalition
government
is
always
in
the
danger
of
breaking
up.
The
Prime
Minister
is
more
worried
about
the
stability
of
his
government
than
about
the
welfare
schemes
for
the
country.
Every
other
day
one
or
the
other
coalition
partner
is
seen
to
take
a
tough
stance
and
threaten
to
walk
out.
The
successive
coalitions
at
the
Centre
the
NDA
and
the
UPA
have
proved
that
the
working
of
coalition
governments
is
difficult
but
it
is
not
an
impossibility.
For
sheer
survival
the
partners
have
to
continue
to
work
together
even
where
there
are
serious
differences.
In
spite
of
all
these
problems
the
coalition
governments
are
doing
well
in
the
country
both
at
the
state
as
well
as
the
national
level.
There
is
however
no
denying
the
fact
that
a
single
party
government
is
always
better
than
a
coalition
government.
The
era
of
coalition
has
come
to
stay
as
a
reality.
In
such
a
situation
the
coalition
parties.
Having
divergent
views
on
various
issues
have
to
agree
to
a