>"On June 4, 2024, *the verdict of our country’s electorate was delivered*
<https://www.thehindu.com/elections/lok-sabha/election-results-2024-bjp-falls-short-needs-allies-to-govern/article68252192.ece>clearly
and resoundingly. It signalled a personal, political, and moral defeat for
a Prime Minister who had awarded himself a divine status during the
campaign. The verdict negated not only such pretensions, but it was also an
unequivocal rejection of the politics of divisiveness, discord and hatred,
a repudiation of both the substance and style of governance of Mr. Narendra
Modi."

>"He preaches the value of consensus but continues to value confrontation.
There is not the slightest evidence that he has come to terms with the
electoral outcome, or understood the verdict and has reflected on the
message sent to him by millions of voters. *The first few days of the 18th
Lok Sabha*
<https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/lok-sabha-speaker-nomination-kodikunnil-suresh-india-bloc-candidate-om-birla-nda-nominee/article68330787.ece>
 have sadly been far from encouraging."

>"It is a fact of history that in March 1977 the people of our country gave
a categorical verdict on the Emergency, which was accepted unhesitatingly
and unequivocally. That less than three years later the party that was
humbled in March 1977 was returned to power, with a majority never achieved
by Mr. Modi and his party, is also very much part of that history."

>"On the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test *(**NEET*) scandal
<https://www.thehindu.com/education/neet-ug-results-2024-allegations-controversy/article68286624.ece>
 that has wreaked havoc on the lives of lakhs of our youth, the immediate
response of the Education Minister was to deny the magnitude of what has
happened."

>"Meanwhile, the campaign of violence and intimidation against India’s
minorities has once again intensified."

>"The INDIA bloc parties have made it clear that they do not seek a
confrontationist attitude."

>"The initial evidence [from 'the Prime Minister and his government'] does
not augur well, but we in the Opposition are committed to restoring balance
and productivity in Parliament, to ensure that the voice of the millions
who have sent us there as their representatives is heard and their concerns
are raised and addressed. We live in hope that the Treasury benches will
step forward so that we can fulfil our democratic duties."

-------------------------------------------
By: Sonia Gandhi
Published in: *The Hindu*
Date: June 29, 2024
Source:
https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/preaching-consensus-provoking-confrontation/article68343827.ece
There is no evidence that the Prime Minister has come to terms with the
electoral outcome or has reflected on the message sent to him by voters,
writes Sonia Gandhi

On June 4, 2024, the verdict of our country’s electorate was delivered
<https://www.thehindu.com/elections/lok-sabha/election-results-2024-bjp-falls-short-needs-allies-to-govern/article68252192.ece>clearly
and resoundingly. It signalled a personal, political, and moral defeat for
a Prime Minister who had awarded himself a divine status during the
campaign. The verdict negated not only such pretensions, but it was also an
unequivocal rejection of the politics of divisiveness, discord and hatred,
a repudiation of both the substance and style of governance of Mr. Narendra
Modi.
The fading of accommodation

Yet, the Prime Minister continues as if nothing has changed. He preaches
the value of consensus but continues to value confrontation. There is not
the slightest evidence that he has come to terms with the electoral
outcome, or understood the verdict and has reflected on the message sent to
him by millions of voters. The first few days of the 18th Lok Sabha
<https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/lok-sabha-speaker-nomination-kodikunnil-suresh-india-bloc-candidate-om-birla-nda-nominee/article68330787.ece>
have
sadly been far from encouraging. Any hope that we might see a changed
attitude has been dashed. Any hope that a new spirit of mutual respect and
accommodation, let alone camaraderie would be fostered, has been belied.

I would like to remind readers what the INDIA bloc parties
<https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/which-are-the-26-parties-in-the-india-combine-the-face-of-opposition-unity-for-the-2024-lok-sabha-polls/article67115171.ece>
 told the Prime Minister when his emissaries sought unanimity for the post
of Speaker. The response was simple and straightforward: we said that we
would support the government — but in keeping with convention and
tradition, it was only fair and to be expected that the post of Deputy
Speaker would be given to a member from the ranks of the Opposition. This
perfectly reasonable request was found unacceptable by a regime that, it
bears recall, had *not filled the Constitutional position of Deputy Speaker
in the 17th Lok Sabha*
<https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/the-second-chair-the-hindu-editorial-on-lok-sabha-deputy-speaker/article32594798.ece>
*.*

And then, the Emergency was dredged up
<https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/lok-sabha-speakers-resolution-on-emergency-triggers-opposition-protests/article68335427.ece>
 by the Prime Minister and his party – astonishingly, even by the Speaker
whose position is incompatible with any public political stance other than
one of strict impartiality. This attempt to divert attention away from the
assault on the Constitution, on its foundational principles and values, on
the institutions it has created and empowered, does not augur well for the
smooth functioning of Parliament.

It is a fact of history that in March 1977 the people of our country gave a
categorical verdict on the Emergency, which was accepted unhesitatingly and
unequivocally. That less than three years later the party that was humbled
in March 1977 was returned to power, with a majority never achieved by Mr.
Modi and his party, is also very much part of that history.
Issues that need extensive debate

We need to look ahead. The bizarre and unprecedented suspension of 146
Members of Parliament
<https://www.thehindu.com/data/record-breaking-suspension-of-143-mps-which-states-and-parties-affected-most-data/article67661005.ece>,
who were legitimately demanding a discussion on a deplorable breach of
Parliament’s security
<https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/parliament-sees-security-breach-as-two-persons-jump-into-lok-sabha-from-public-gallery/article67633757.ece>,
was clearly a way of ensuring that three far-reaching criminal justice laws
<https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/revised-criminal-law-bills-the-key-changes-explained/article67637348.ece>
could
be passed without any discussion. Several legal experts and many others
have expressed grave concerns about these laws. Should these laws not be
kept in abeyance till they have undergone fuller Parliamentary scrutiny in
keeping with accepted parliamentary practice and especially since the
electoral verdict of 2024? Similarly, amendments to forest conservation and
biological diversity protection forest laws
<https://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/energy-and-environment/explained-what-will-the-amended-forest-conservation-act-change/article67146543.ece>
were
pushed through last year when there was uproar and chaos in Parliament. An
ecological and humanitarian disaster is awaiting us as the Great Nicobar
project
<https://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/energy-and-environment/what-is-in-great-nicobar-site-of-niti-aayogs-mega-project-explained/article68327325.ece>
is
pushed through. Should they also not be revisited to give meaning to the
Prime Minister’s stated desire for consensus and for passage of laws after
full debate and discussion?

On the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET) scandal
<https://www.thehindu.com/education/neet-ug-results-2024-allegations-controversy/article68286624.ece>
that
has wreaked havoc on the lives of lakhs of our youth, the immediate
response of the Education Minister was to deny the magnitude of what has
happened. The Prime Minister who does his ‘*Pariksha pe Charcha*’ has been
conspicuously silent on the leaks that have devastated so many families
across the country. The inevitable ‘high power committees’ have been
constituted but the real issue is how the professionalism of educational
institutions such as the National Council of Educational Research and
Training, the University Grants Commission and universities themselves have
been so deeply damaged in the last 10 years.

Meanwhile, the campaign of violence and intimidation against India’s
minorities has once again intensified. In the Bharatiya Janata Party
(BJP)-ruled States, bulldozers are again demolishing the homes of
minorities based on mere allegations, violating due process, and inflicting
collective punishment. None of this is surprising given the communal
invective and blatant falsehoods that the Prime Minister inflicted on the
people during the election campaign. He provocatively escalated the
rhetoric out of fear that the election was slipping away from him, showing
complete disregard for the dignity and *maryada* of his position.

In February 2022, the BJP and its allies got a convincing majority in the
assembly elections in Manipur
<https://www.thehindu.com/elections/manipur-assembly/manipur-election-results-2022-live-updates/article65207451.ece>.
Yet, within 15 months Manipur began to burn—or should it be said was
allowed to begin to burn. Hundreds of people have been killed and thousands
dislocated. Social harmony in this most sensitive state has been shattered.
Yet, the Prime Minister has not found either the time or the inclination to
visit the State nor to meet with its political leaders. It is no wonder
that his party has lost both the Lok Sabha seats there, but this does not
seem to have had any impact on his most insensitive handling of the crisis
that has engulfed Manipur’s variegated society.

The Prime Minister diminished himself by the campaign he ran for over forty
days. His words did untold damage to our social fabric and to the dignity
of the office he is privileged to hold. It is for him to reflect and
introspect and recognise that in rejecting his call for 400-plus
parliamentary seats, crores of our people – to whom he promises *sabka
saath, sabka vikas* — sent a powerful message, that they had had enough.
The Opposition will reflect India’s voice

The INDIA bloc parties have made it clear that they do not seek a
confrontationist attitude. The Leader of the Opposition Rahul Gandhi has
offered cooperation. The leaders of the constituents of the alliance have
made clear that they are looking to being productive in Parliament and to
impartiality in the conduct of its proceedings. It is our hope that the
Prime Minister and his government will respond positively. The initial
evidence does not augur well, but we in the Opposition are committed to
restoring balance and productivity in Parliament, to ensure that the voice
of the millions who have sent us there as their representatives is heard
and their concerns are raised and addressed. We live in hope that the
Treasury benches will step forward so that we can fulfil our democratic
duties.

*Sonia Gandhi*,* Member of Parliament (Rajya Sabha), is Chairperson of the
Congress Parliamentary Party*

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