
Raj Babbar8217;s disenchantment with the Samajwadi Party seems to be, among other things, on account of the latter8217;s alleged preference for socialites over socialists. With due apologies to this son-in-law of a communist 8212; as Sitaram Yechury approvingly described Babbar 8212; we would have to wish Mulayam Singh success in such an ideological retrogression. Lohiaite socialism, the credo SP and some other political formations in the Hindi heartland officially subscribe to, can always and justifiably claim that some of its leaders opposed the Emergency with gusto and paid for it. But in politics, moral high grounds are not sufficient if ideas growing on them are intellectually atrophied.
Lohiaites have been offering sons of the soil who tend produce economic wastelands 8212; look the indices of Hindi heartland. This vast stretch of India needs new ideas. And hope is finally visible. Laloo Yadav didn8217;t want to modernise Bihar and he8217;s out. Nitish Kumar has a tough job. But by breaking up, over union protests, the state electricity board in four, he gave a good indication of what he8217;ll try. Laloo as rail minister has actually been a reformer. Mulayam has not given up on UP power reforms, neither on his efforts to get big-ticket projects, whether in real estate or heavy industry. Sugar in UP has undergone a quiet reform: private mills out-competing public ones in procuring cane from farmers.