Sunday, 9 March 2014

A new man in town.

                                                                                                                      Photo Courtesy: Surendra, The Hindu 

He started his political career cautiously with a well-planned long term strategy. We get that as IITians are used to achieve such a feat early in their career. To everyone’s amazement he was able to implement it very well. During the peak of his crusade riot, he was undoubtedly coronated as the third alternative to politics’ tag. Thousands of frustrated Indians added themselves to his fan base at that time and gradually started accepting his ideas and allegations as gospel truth. We can’t blame them for their misjudgement, firstly because, Mr Kejriwal played his cards brilliantly in an ingenious manner and secondly, as the common man was fed up with the corrupt, dynastic, caste and a communal politics and found in him someone whom they could related to mainly because he is (was) a common man himself, tired of the trite politics played in our country. Even an innocuous child can figure out that the intentions he portrayed were for the good. The masses who voted in his favour were proud to see him as the face of their state when he was voted to power. People started treating him as a demi god, a messiah who came from nowhere with a strong untenable intention to clean the Indian political system and bring the power to the people.  They would fondly publicise and promote his judgements and allegations. But gradually his motives faltered, his intentions misaligned, his decisions’ irrevocably misplaced in the national scenario.  Be it practising vigilante justice or tarnishing the diplomatic relations with another country or the dharnas carried out near the republic day arrangements or calling himself an anarchist or stepping down as the CM of Delhi portraying himself as a martyr. With every such breaking news it was an uphill task for his followers to justify his decisions in public. The hero whom they used to worship and accept everything he said as gospel had a hard time trying to justify their choice. I remember a senior journalist who joined the party trying to justify Mr Kejriwal calling himself an anarchist by quoting the definitions from the Oxford dictionary on national television. By stepping down as the CM of Delhi by masking the Jan Lokpal issue he ingeniously made his way forward with the national leadership role. But he overplayed his cards it seems as by cheating the people of Delhi he just cannot find himself at the national stage. He actually used the Delhi elections as a profile boost to get a favourable opinion on the national scenario. That’s a big risk he took, as the citizens of Delhi won’t forgive him for that.

It is difficult to imagine Mr Kejriwal taking the national centre stage considering the tasks they need to work on as the party is inexperienced. Understanding international issues and dealing with the diplomatic relations with other countries are extremely sensitive issues and require experience. Practising vigilante justice at national level is just not in sync with today’s time.