Placing the Right Person at the Right Position: The Need to Reflect on How We Elect Our Representatives
On 17-18 February 2024, the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) organized a two-day National Convention in New Delhi aimed at strategizing its plan for the upcoming Lok Sabha elections. Curiously, the Meitei chief minister, Mr. N. Biren Singh, chose to skip, rather forced to, and stayed back in Imphal, though BJP leaders from the Kuki community, including Minister Pi Nemcha Kipgen, attended the convention. The reason behind Biren’s absence was apparently due to the mounting pressure from various Meitei organizations to resolve the current crisis before initiating any process for the election.
It is also noteworthy that while
virtually inaugurating the newly constructed Jawaharlal Nehru Vidyalaya (JNV)
School building online, the Honorable Prime Minister Shri Narendra Modi lauded
Pi Nemcha, the lone woman in the state cabinet, for her contribution towards
the upliftment of the people. Dr. S. Lorho Pfoze, the Hon’ble MP (Outer
Manipur), and other dignitaries attending the function also lauded the Minister
and the local people for the successful completion of the new building.
In this article, we will discuss the
importance of having the right leaders in the right place by assessing how we
elect our representatives and community leaders to fix responsibility. For
God’s sake, it is time to change our mindsets as we are facing a serious threat
to our very existence as a community.
To go back in time, the first-ever
democratic elections for the Legislative Assembly of Manipur were held in July
1948. Out of the total 53 seats, 29 were in the valley, including 3 plural
constituencies, and 18 in the hills. The 3 plural constituencies elected a
Mohammedan and a General candidate each. Due to pressure from the hills,
Moirang was also made a special seat where one tribal and one general were elected. Apart from this, two more seats were reserved for representatives of
educational and commercial interest. The kind of seat distributions and the
representatives so elected in this election show that the State Assembly was
relatively inclusive in the beginning.
However, the Princely State of Manipur
was merged with the Indian Union on 15 October 1949, to the utter dismay of the
hill people, particularly the Kukis, and since then, the state outrightly lost
its semi-independent status.
Before Manipur got statehood in 1972,
another election for the 30-member Assembly was held in 1967. But since 1972,
elections for the 60-member State Legislative Assembly have been conducted
regularly.
The state elections from 1967 till the
1980s replicate the 1948 elections in a big way. However, in terms of
seat-sharing between the hills and valley, it has always been at the ratio of
2:1. In 1948, it was 30:18:3 for Hindus, Hills, and Muslims. In 1967, the
valley was allotted 20 seats and the hills 10 seats. And since 1972, 40 belong
to the valley and 20 to the hills, including 19 reserved for ST. This has been
done so that the valley people will always dominate the Assembly.
Around this time, the choice of
candidates was more on the person than the community. This is evident from the
fact that Kishore Thapa, a Nepali, was elected from the Kuki-dominated
Kangpokpi AC thrice in 1972, 1974, and 1980, and D. Kipgen, a Kuki, won from
the Zeliangrong (Naga) dominated Tamei AC in 1967. In Saikul, Mr. R. Voi, who
belongs to a minority community from the AC, won in 1972. Yet, tribalism slowly
crept into the psyche of the people during this phase. As such, voting on
ethnic lines occupies the center stage, and merit-based choices took the
backseat.
This pattern of voting on ethnic lines
was further deepened by elements of tribalism and clannism among the hill
people. So it has become a common phenomenon that votes are cast on certain
subjective factors rather than on objective foundations. As a result, the
elected members always belong to the dominant ethnic community of the
respective constituency!
One common characteristic of voting or
electoral behaviour in India, including Manipur, is the little importance
attached to party ideologies and principles. There is also a lack of loyalty
towards one’s political party. Candidates usually hop from one party to another
at will without any regard for anti-defection laws, the political party that provides them election tickets, and the sentiments of the voters who elected
them.
In the Imphal valley, money occupies
the most important position as the price of a vote can vary anywhere from ₹500
to ₹5000, and even up to ₹20,000 in rare cases. In contrast, the voters in the
hills are usually influenced by three elements: ethnicity/identity, armed
groups, and village chiefs. Any candidate who neither belongs to a dominant
community nor gets the support of such dominant groups, or enjoys the support
of the armed groups and village authorities has simply no chance of winning,
howsoever capable [s]he is. In a similar situation, as the minority communities
have no chance of getting elected, they usually end up supporting candidates
with the highest chance of winning. As a result, the personality of candidates
often becomes secondary for the choice for them is based on winnability of the
candidates.
Overall, the electoral behaviour of the
people is largely decided by the candidates’ ethnicity, tribe, or clan, and
support from armed groups and social elites. In other words, voters are more
influenced by money and muscle powers than party manifestos and the personality of
the candidates.
Therefore, it is high time to be
critical of ourselves on how we have been electing our representatives in the
past, and think about changing our mindsets. The last 2022 Assembly elections
have seen a drastic change among the tribals of Manipur as more educated people
get elected. Among the 10 (ten) Kuki-Zo MLAs, there are high-ranking officers
who took voluntary retirement, or left their jobs to take up social services.
Some of them are also experienced social workers and senior politicians. In
terms of educational qualifications, most of them are graduates or
post-graduates. The performance of these MLAs might not be perfect, but imagine
what could have been our current situation in case we had elected the less educated
candidates as we usually did in the past! Electing educated candidates, though
not necessarily perfect, is always an added advantage.
Now, having said this, it is also high
time to start considering electing our representatives and community leaders
based on their merits. Until and unless we do away with electing our
representatives based on their tribe/clan, and money and muscle powers they
have, we won’t be able to see much changes. Moreover, as our survival is at
stake in the face of constant threats from the dominant community, we can only
think of our future by taking the right decisions at the right time. In this
regard, the upcoming Lok Sabha election could be a litmus test for the Kuki-Zo
leaders and the general public alike.
Anyway, can we start by doing away with candidates whose strength lies in the armed groups?
(Courtesy: KSO Bulletin Thingkho le Malcha, Issue no. 174, 5 March 2024).
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