http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Opinion/Columnists/A_sobering_lesson/articleshow/2094804.cms

A sobering lesson
3 Jun, 2007 l 0118 hrs ISTlGurcharan Das/TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Now that the dust has settled and the instant pundits have had their
day, this may be a good time to sit back and reflect on the
significance of Mayawati's amazing victory in Uttar Pradesh. For the
first time in Independent India a Dalit has won an absolute majority,
anywhere. UP is, of course, not anywhere - it is 15% of India and home
to the largest upper caste population. The people of UP are euphoric.
They finally have a government that will not be at the mercy of
coalitions. Many Indians - and not just Dalits - see in Mayawati a
future prime minister leading a national party. No wonder she has lit
a fuse under every political party.

Meanwhile, we have heard plenty of explanations for her win. The most
common is that it was a vote against the 'goonda raj' of Mulayam
Singh. Another is the Left's typical knee-jerk reaction - it was a
revolt of the poor against the rich. A third view sees in her victory
a decline of casteist politics; a trend that began in Bihar a year
ago. Then there is is Yogendra Yadav's conclusion - poor Dalits, poor
OBCs, poor Muslims, and poor Brahmins have stitched together a
"rainbow coalition of the downtrodden". The RSS has explained the
BJP's debacle as the softening of Hindutva ideology. As for the
Congress' position, the less said the better.

There may be some truth in all these explanations, but none of them
goes to the heart of the matter. In Barabanki district, an OBC woman
was slapped by her uncle for voting for Mayawati. In her defence she
told the reporter that the village patwari, a Mulayam supporter,
refused to transfer her land in her name unless she paid him a hefty
bribe. A group of auto-drivers in Muzzafarnagar told a Hindi news
channel that policemen pocketed a fifth of their daily earnings. By
voting in Mayawati they hoped that the police's share might come down
to a sixth. People thus vote sensibly for the things that matter to
them.

A woman needs a title to her land. Auto drivers expect to ply their
autos without harassment. A sick patient wants the doctor to treat him
when he visits his primary health centre. A mother wants her child to
learn something in school. This is how government touches ordinary
people's lives. All governments in India are so eaten away by
corruption and mismanagement that they cannot deliver the simplest
things that people in the Far East and the West take for granted -
drinking water, sanitation, roads without potholes, honest policemen
and revenue officials, and decent schools and health centres. Hence,
Indians do the only thing that they can, they boot out one set of
incompetents just to bring in another.

'Anti-incumbency' is thus a code word, and it means: "You good for
nothing bungler - you have failed me, and i am kicking you out,
knowing full well that i may have to kick him out too." This is a
sobering lesson for Mayawati and a wake-up call for the Congress.
Unless the UPA government implements administrative reforms and
improves governance, it faces the same fate as Mulayam Singh.

When the euphoria is over and the hard light of the day begins to
stare her in the face, Mayawati will have to remember that voters want
basic services rather than Ambedkar statues. Then her leadership
skills will be tested. A good leader sets clear goals for her
officers, monitors progress, encourages high performers, and helps
remove obstacles in their way. This is how things get done. I fear
that Mayawati will probably fail this test, but I shall be happy if i
am proved wrong.

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