[Key bills, like the goods and services tax, India's single biggest
tax reform after independence, are stuck. Rahul Gandhi, leader of a
weakened Congress party and apparently short of original ideas, is
suddenly looking belligerent and his party resurgent - despite only
having 44 MPs.
...
Clearly, Mr Modi's honeymoon has ended earlier than expected.
...
Commentators like Swaminathan S Anklesaria Aiyar now say Mr Modi has
been "vacillating and unwilling to fight to the finish on any
difficult issue", happy "coining slogans rather than in implementing
tough decisions".
Mr Modi, says Mr Aiyar scathingly, "presides today over apathetic
sense of drift, defensiveness and lack of conviction".
...
If the BJP wins crucial state elections in Bihar, it will prove that
Mr Modi's personal popularity still remains reasonably high. If it
loses, it could be a sign that Mr Modi may have squandered the massive
mandate that a very hopeful India awarded him last year.

(Extracted from, and highlighted below.)]
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-33783510

Has Narendra Modi lost the plot?

Soyik Biswas
Delhi correspondent

5 August 2015
 From the section India

Narendra Modi swept to power with an overwhelming majority last year

Has India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi lost the plot?
This week, his BJP government backed down on its controversial land
acquisition bill, which would have made it easier for land to be used
for industry and infrastructure projects. It has, more or less,
returned to the old law approved by the former Congress party
government which actually made it tougher for industry to acquire land
from farmers.

This is a big blow to Mr Modi's land plans and is seen by many as the
beginning of the end of reform.

In fact, the prime minister has shown little appetite for reform so
far: last year his government rolled back a suburban train fare hike
after protests from commuters, a move that a once-sympathetic
columnist now says was an act of "spineless populism".

Hasty and inept
Presently, parliament is gridlocked with protests by opposition
parties, who are demanding the resignations of two prominent BJP
leaders - Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj and Rajasthan Chief Minister
Vasundhara Raje - for helping former IPL cricket chief Lalit Modi, who
lives in London and is wanted by the Indian authorities over
corruption allegations he denies.

With an outright majority in the lower house but lacking one in the
upper house, Mr Modi's BJP has fumbled badly in parliament, displaying
little strategic acumen and poor political management, as one Indian
newspaper remarked.

***Key bills, like the goods and services tax, India's single biggest
tax reform after independence, are stuck. Rahul Gandhi, leader of a
weakened Congress party and apparently short of original ideas, is
suddenly looking belligerent and his party resurgent - despite only
having 44 MPs.*** [Emphasis added.]

That's not all.
This week's hasty and inept decision to block access to internet porn
and almost immediately lift the ban made the government the butt of
social media jokes. And many believe that Mr Modi's government is
being petty, vindictive and partisan in browbeating critical NGOs,
hounding a prominent social activist and packing educational
institutions with people whose credentials many find dubious.

In a piece full of foreboding, analyst Mihir Sharma accused the prime
minister of misusing state machinery to hound critics and target NGOs,
adding that Mr Modi was "intelligently putting into place the
structures that will change the nature of India's liberal democracy
forever".

***Clearly, Mr Modi's honeymoon has ended earlier than expected.***
[Emphasis added.]

The Congress is again resurgent after forcing the BJP on the back foot
on the land acquisition bill

Political scientist Ashutosh Varshney believes that Mr Modi's
legitimacy has been declining for a while. Despite his useful
globetrotting and foreign policy successes, he is seen to have been
less successful at home.

The prime minister has often been silent in the face of rabble-rousing
by hardline elements in his party.

February's debacle in the Delhi elections, when the BJP was trounced
by the anti-corruption AAP, was attributed by many to BJP hubris.
***Commentators like Swaminathan S Anklesaria Aiyar now say Mr Modi
has been "vacillating and unwilling to fight to the finish on any
difficult issue", happy "coining slogans rather than in implementing
tough decisions".*** [Emphasis added.]

***Mr Modi, says Mr Aiyar scathingly, "presides today over apathetic
sense of drift, defensiveness and lack of conviction".*** [Emphasis
added.]

So can Mr Modi turn the tide?
Political scientist Milan Vaishnav of the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace in Washington says Mr Modi's honeymoon may have
ended prematurely in part "because of his government's inability to
sell its programme for reform".

"This has two aspects: the first is devising a coherent reform vision
in which all government agencies are marching in lockstep.
Unfortunately, the government has stumbled on this first step; even
within the finance ministry, for instance, there have been a
multiplicity of voices on how strongly to break with past policies,"
he tells me.

"This incoherence has been complicated by a second, related problem:
an inability to use the government's megaphone to sell its plan to the
masses."

It is still early days for Mr Modi's government. Also, the hand the
Congress is playing is limited and its electoral future remains bleak.

Observers say Mr Modi needs to swiftly script a recovery: less
arrogance, a better team of ministers and advisers, initiating crucial
institutional and regulatory reforms, and learning the arts of
political and social bipartisanship could help spur a recovery of
sorts. But it won't be easy.

***If the BJP wins crucial state elections in Bihar, it will prove
that Mr Modi's personal popularity still remains reasonably high. If
it loses, it could be a sign that Mr Modi may have squandered the
massive mandate that a very hopeful India awarded him last year.***
[Emphasis added.]
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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