
It is really not our business to decide which party 8212; the Congress or the Nationalist Congress Party 8212; has the greater claim to Maharashtra8217;s top political job. What is our business, though, is to state that this tussle over the state8217;s chief ministership, which has already deprived the people of Maharashtra of an elected government for five days now and doesn8217;t appear likely to end in a hurry, is not just unseemly, it is an insult to the people of the state.
Maharashtra does not deserve to be treated so shabbily. It is in urgent need of an enlightened and committed political leadership, what with its mounting state deficit, its crumbling urban infrastructure and unfinished projects, its numerous pockets of rural deprivation. Both the Congress and the NCP have made numerous promises to voters in terms of transforming their lives. But when the time has come for them to redeem that pledge, they are busy splitting hairs over the leadership issue. One says that it went to the polls as the acknowledged 8220;senior8221; partner and therefore must get the CM8217;s chair, the other insists that its larger tally of seats 8212; 71:69 8212; signifies its superior status and therefore its claim to the top job. The point is that the Congress-NCP alliance was a pre-poll one and this issue should have been thrashed out much before the first vote was cast. The coalition should have also evolved mechanisms by which disputes of this kind were settled smoothly, without them being dragged into the public sphere. Certainly the on-going cat fight does little to bolster public confidence in the new government.