
In many ways the United Progressive Alliance under Manmohan Singh is a more complex coalition than the National Democratic Alliance that Atal Bihari Vajpayee headed. This is so even though the latter had some 24 constituents at one point and Vajpayee himself was driven to appeal to voters in the last Lok Sabha elections to send the BJP back to power on a more stable basis. As it happened, the 14th Lok Sabha saw the NDA relegated to the opposition benches and there, on the treasury benches, sat the UPA comprising 15 distinct political parties. What casts a shadow over prospects of UPA8217;s extended longevity is the fact that it has an additional tier that the NDA did not have 8212; Left parties, which are often pitted against the Congress in electoral frays, supporting the coalition from the outside. One of the big arguments in favour of getting the Left parties to join the UPA government, in fact, was that this would provide the ruling coalition with some foundational strength, besides possibly instilling responsibility in Marxist ranks.
That, however, did not happen. The Left chose to stay out and there have been moments 8212; as, for instance, tensions over Budget proposals after which CPM leader Sitaram Yechury famously declared on television that his party was prepared to bite 8212; when the UPA boat did look as if it had hit pretty stormy waters given the ideological differences inherent within it. A coordination committee 8212; which Congress President Sonia Gandhi and senior Left leaders are presently working to set up 8212; would be the bureaucrat8217;s answer to this instability. This is not to say that it won8217;t provide some useful ballast to steady the UPA barge. This is to say that it is not a sufficient measure to stabilise this coalition.