The "mood", to be sure, has definitely changed.
Thus, has opened up the space for a renewed and effective pushback.
The Opposition, keenly aware of that fact, is out to make as much song and
dance as possible on the floor of the parliament and organising street
protests on the most burning issue of paper leaks.
The regime is least expected to leisurely sit back. The new Bharatiya Nyay
Sanhita, to come into effect on July 1st, would hugely add to its
repressive armoury.
So, a new phase of critical struggle ensuing.

https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/what-has-changed-apparently-nothing-9423288/

P Chidambaram writes: What has changed? Apparently nothingThere have been
several setbacks in the 20 days since the government was formed.
Written by P Chidambaram
<https://indianexpress.com/profile/columnist/p-chidambaram/>
Updated: June 30, 2024 10:03 IST


The BJP-led government under the Hon’ble Mr Narendra Modi was sworn in on
June 9, 2024. It did not have a happy start. Mr Modi had to share the head
table with the leaders of the TDP and JD(U) and allot portfolios to them
and other allies. In the election of the Speaker he had to go through the
motions of consultation. Both were unusual experiences for Mr Modi in his
22 years as head of government.
Several Setbacks

There have been several setbacks in the 20 days since the government was
formed.

The National Testing Agency imploded and the raging fire consumed the
aspirations of lakhs of students. There was a horrific train accident in
Jalpaiguri. Terrorist attacks continued in Jammu
<https://indianexpress.com/section/cities/jammu/> & Kashmir. The prices of
tomato, potato and onion increased, year on year, by 39, 41 and 43 per
cent, respectively. The Sensex and Nifty soared to historic highs while the
dollar-rupee exchange rate plunged to a historic low. Toll tax on highways
was raised by 15 per cent. In an apparent censure, Mr Mohan Bhagwat, the
sarsanghchalak of RSS, admonished those who displayed “arrogance”; the BJP
<https://indianexpress.com/about/bjp/>’s leadership squirmed but decided
that discretion was the better part of valour. Local mutinies broke out in
several state units of the BJP.

In the first session of Parliament, save the election of the Speaker and
the President’s Address, there was no substantive business. But even the
routine business had its share of controversies. By convention, the member
of Parliament who has been elected most times to the Lok Sabha would be
nominated the pro-tem Speaker to preside over taking the oath by elected
members. That person, undisputedly, was Mr K Suresh (Congress-Kerala) who
has been elected for the 8th time, though with a break. However, the
government nominated Mr B Mahtab (BJP-Odisha
<https://indianexpress.com/article/when-is/odisha-lok-sabha-elections-2024-schedule-phase-seats-candidates-and-all-you-need-to-know-about-odisha-general-elections-9162538/>)
for the office although he has been elected only 7 times (six times on the
BJD ticket and, after he crossed over, the 7th time on the BJP ticket).

Why did the BJP kick up the avoidable controversy? Possible answers are:
BJP wanted to signal that the results of the LS elections have not dented
its supreme leader’s way of doing things, namely, ‘it’s my way or
highway’. Another
answer could be that the controversy-courting Mr K. Rijiju, the new
minister of parliamentary affairs, wanted to signal his arrival. The most
plausible answer is that the nomination was a reward for Mr Mahtab’s
defection from the BJD to the BJP and to encourage more MPs to defect to
the BJP.
Stale Assurances

Although the election of the Speaker concluded on a sour note, the rest of
the session need not have been affected. But the Hon’ble Speaker added more
bitterness when he moved a resolution from the Chair excoriating the
Congress for the imposition of Emergency 49 years ago (yes, 49 years, not
50)! Next, Parliament may ‘teach’ other history lessons by condemning
Pakistan for the invasion of Kashmir in 1947, China for the war in 1962 and
the United States for sending an aircraft carrier to intimidate India in
1971. The resolution was an unwarranted provocation.

The President’s Address to the joint session of both Houses was an
opportunity to restore civility after false starts, but the opportunity was
missed. The speech could have recognized the changed composition of the Lok
Sabha, the fact that the leading party (BJP) was short of a majority by 32
seats, that the prime minister was the primus inter pares of a coalition
government and that, after 10 years, there would be a Leader of the
Opposition in the Lok Sabha. Disappointingly, the President’s Address made
no reference to the altered circumstances.

The speech was a litany of claims made by the BJP before and during the
elections. The claims were rebuffed by the vast majority of the people. The
new government is not a BJP government but a coalition government. The BJP
has refused to acknowledge the bittersweet fact and the President echoed
that view. The word ‘coalition’, did not occur in the speech. Other words
that were conspicuous by their absence included ‘consensus’, ‘inflation
<https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/everyday-explainers/what-are-wholesale-price-index-consumer-price-index-inflation-rates-7820831/>’,
and ‘parliamentary committee’. There were references to scheduled castes,
scheduled tribes and backward classes but all others — especially the
minority communities — were clubbed in the catch-all phrase ‘social and
religious groups’. There was no reference to the tragedy of Manipur. As a
small mercy there was no reference to ‘Agniveer’ or ‘Uniform Civil Code’.
Finally, India is no longer a Vishwa Guru, and is content to be a Vishwa
Bandhu!
More of the Sameness

Apparently, in the view of the BJP, nothing has changed, not even the mood
of the people.

Hence, it is the same Cabinet, the same ministers, the key ministers hold
the same portfolios, the same Speaker, the same principal secretary to the
prime minister, the same National Security Adviser, the same chief of the
Intelligence Bureau, the same government law officers, and many others
remaining in the same positions. Besides, I am told that the social media
is full of the same paid trolls who are semi-literate, diversionary,
proficient in the science of scatology, and obvious losers. That, I am
afraid, is conclusive proof that nothing has changed despite the verdict of
the people!
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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