Coalition Politics in India: Problems and Prospects
By- Mahendra Prasad Singh and Anil Mishra (eds)
With the replacement of the dominant party system in
India, minority and/or coalition governments in New Delhi have become the order
of the day. Except for the Congress minority government of P.V. Narasimha Rao
and National Democratic Alliance government of Atal Behari Vajpayee, all such
governments since 1989 have been unstable. Yet instability apart, coalition
governments have been effective in enhancing democratic legitimacy,
representativeness and national unity. Major policy shifts like neo-liberal
economic reforms, federal decentring, and grass roots decentralization, in
theory or practice, are largely attributable to the onset of federal
coalitional governance. Coalition governments in states and at the centre have
also facilitated gradual transition of the Marxist-Left and the Hindu-Right
into the political establishment, and thus contributed to the integration of
the party system as well as the nation. The same major national parties which
initially rejected the idea of coalition politics have today accepted it and
are maturing into skilled and virtuoso performers at the game.
In a rather short span of over a decade, India has
witnessed coalition governments of three major muted hues: (a)
middle-of-the-road Centrist Congress minority government of P.V. Narasimha Rao,
going against its Left of Centre reputation, initiated neo-liberal economic
reforms in 1991; (b) three Left-of-Centre governments formed by the Janata
Dal-led National/United Front; and (c) two Right-of-Centre coalition
governments formed by the Bharatiya Janata Party-led National Democratic
Aliance under Atal Behari Vajpayee, a votary of secular version of Hindu
nationalism.
In the wake of the decline of Congress dominance, the
fragmentation of the national party system and the emergence of party systems
at the regional level have turned India into a chequered federal chessboard.
The past and likely future patterns of coalition governments in New Delhi are
suggestive of at least three models of power sharing: (a) coalition of more or
less equal partners, e.g. the National Front and the United Front, (b)
coalition of relatively smaller parties led by a major party, e.g. National
Democratic Alliance; and (c) coalition of relatively smaller parties
facilitated but not necessarily led by a prime minister from the major parties
formed in 2004 around the Indian National Congress, avowing secular Indian
nationalism.
The fifteen papers in this book analyse the various
dimensions of coalition government at the Centre and in some of the states of
the Indian federation against the background of a theoretical framework that
seeks to integrate coalitions among parties, castes and communities and tribes,
as well as classes at electoral, parliamentary, and cabinet levels.
Mahendra
Prasad Singh, Professor of Political Science, University of Delhi, Delhi.
Anil Mishra,
Department of Political Science, PG-DAV College, New Delhi.
ISBN
978-81-7304-573-8
2004 338p. Rs.795/Pounds 50
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