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archive: Utterly Atal

Utterly Atal

Editorial
The Times of India
May 3, 1999


    Title: Utterly Atal
    Author: Editorial
    Publication: The Times of India 
    Date: May 3, 1999 
    
    For a public inured to the slander and vilification which pass for
    politics in this country, the recent remarks made by Prime Minister
    Atal Behari Vajpayee in an interview to a weekly magazine come as a
    breath of fresh air. Summoning all the wisdom of his long years in
    public life, Mr Vajpayee went out of his way to dissociate himself
    from the allegations some, of his party colleagues have levelled
    against President; K R Narayanan in the light of the latter's actions
    during the past few weeks of political uncertainty. The suggestion has
    been made that the President unduly favoured the Congress and did his
    utmost to prevent the BJP from returning to power. The Prime Minister
    emphasised that he had no problem with the way Mr Narayanan has
    discharged his duties and added that even if the BJP had been invited
    by Rashtrapati Bhavan to try and form a government for the second
    time, he would have refused the invitation. By helping to clear the
    air in this manner, Mr Vajpayee is not just upholding the dignity of
    the office of the President; his remarks are also an act of political
    astuteness. For in shunning rancour and taking a principled view of
    the constraints under which the President has had to operate, the BJP
    leader has buttressed his reputation as a statesman capable of
    transcending narrow, partisan concerns.
    
    In similar vein, Mr Vajpayee has also stated that the foreign origins
    of Congress leader Sonia Gandhi should not be the subject of debate
    and negative political propaganda during the forthcoming elections.
    These columns can only heartily endorse the Prime Minister's wise
    words. In the past few weeks several senior leaders from Mr Vajpayee's
    coalition have made unseemly remarks about the fact that Mrs Sonia
    Gandhi - as Indian a citizen as any if we go by the Constitution - was
    born in Italy. Defence minister George Fernandes, who should know
    better than to inflict a racial definition of citizenship on the
    nation, seems particularly exercised by the fact that Mrs Gandhi is of
    Italian extraction. Politicians who normally rave and rant against the
    United States have suddenly started clamouring for India to imitate
    that country's ban on foreign-born citizens becoming head of
    government. Leaving aside the possibility that a xenophobic political
    campaign against Mrs Gandhi might actually rebound on those who wage
    it, propriety demands that the Congress's foes counter the party
    politically The Election Commission should also make it clear that
    negative references to the Congress leader's race or national origin
    would violate its code of conduct. Ironically, there is no dearth of
    issues Mrs Gandhi's detractors can legitimately raise. Apart from a
    possible link with the Bofors seam, there is the question of her
    political inexperience and her inability to hold forth on vital
    economic, political and social issues without the crutch of advisers
    and prompting cards. In a democracy, political parties have every
    right to go for the jugular but they must not overstep the bounds of
    decency. The Prime Minister has done well to indicate that he is not
    in favour of making an issue of the "Italian connection". What he must
    do now is ensure that his party - and especially its fringe elements -
    show the same degree of maturity and restraint.
    



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