With
domiciliary requirements, desirable candidates are forced
to go through the farcical process of registering themselves
as voters in a state where they do not reside, and resort
to undignified subterfuge. Manmohan Singh, Arun Jaitley,
Arun Shourie, Karan Singh, Venkaiah Naidu and many other
major public figures had to be elected in this manner. Therefore,
supporters of the Bill contend, it is better to do away
with the residential requirement. The fear of parties nominating
all members representing a state from outside is largely
hypothetical. Political realities and local sentiments being
what they are, parties will nominate only a few senior functionaries
for election from another state, and such a flexibility
is needed to strengthen legislature and council of ministers.
Regarding
open ballot, critics argue that it violates a fundamental
democratic principle. But supporters argue that secret ballot
in Rajya Sabha election has only led to selling of votes
to the highest bidder, and party discipline is breaking
down. For over two decades, money has been changing hands
in Rajya Sabha elections. Sometimes parties are paying their
own MLAs to vote for the official party nominees! In a South
Indian state, it is widely believed that a businessman spent
over Rs 40 crores in two elections, once unsuccessfully,
to be elected to Rajya Sabha! In several states, secrecy
of ballot has been violated by ingenious methods in order
to combat vote-buying. For instance, each MLA is given a
unique order of preference (which serves as a code for the
MLA) while voting for the party candidates. If six candidates
of the party contest, there could be 720 such unique permutations!
If the MLA assigned a permutation strays, such defiance
can be detected by the absence of any ballot containing
the unique order (code) allotted to him! Given these realities,
the argument goes, it is better to give up secrecy.
All
these argument favouring and opposing the Bill do not address
the real crisis affecting our legislatures. The problem
is elsewhere, and neither status quo nor the proposed changes
will solve it. Our elections have become big business. Only
those willing to, and capable of, spending vast and unaccounted
sums illegitimately have a realistic chance of being elected
to Lok Sabha or State Assemblies in most cases. Highly competent
and respected citizens are repelled by this process, and
turn their backs to politics. And in the first-past-the-post
(FPTP) system we have adopted, a party or candidate with
significant, but scattered support base has no chance of
being elected. Only concentrated support base ensures representation.
Such a system perpetuates feudal fiefdoms and oligopoly
of a few castes and money power. It is high time we considered
proportional representation (PR) as a method of election
to overcome these distortions. Even Britain, the mother
of FPTP system, has switched over to PR in regional parliaments
in Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland, and for elections
to European Parliament. What is more, our constitution does
not bar PR. In 1952 and 1957, we had constituencies with
2 or 3 members to accommodate reservations. Article 329
provides for allocation of members to territorial constituencies.
All we need is multi-member constituencies with several
members, and election of party candidates on proportionality
principle, or in the order of votes obtained.
As
long as competent and public-spirited candidates cannot
be elected to the Lower House by fair means, the demand
for Rajya Sabha nominations will continue to grow. The present
Bill will only enhance the bargaining position of the party
leaderships, and jack up the price for a party nomination!
Removal of residential requirement and voting secrecy is
a short-term, knee-jerk response to a complex crisis. Party
leaderships will become more powerful and less accountable
by these amendments. We need to switch over to PR with reasonable
threshold norms for party representation and democratic
choice of party nominees, in order to facilitate election
of decent candidates to the Lower House with their honour
and dignity intact.
***