
If only the BJP and the Congress could bury their differences and get together to fight poverty, 8220;in no time India will be a superpower8221;. Similar ideas have been expressed in the past by academics like Meghnad Desai, but this time it comes from a practitioner of politics, former Lok Sabha speaker P.A. Sangma. There is no great difference between the economic and foreign policies of the Congress and the BJP, and if only the BJP could be persuaded to junk that sticky inconvenient 8220;religious agenda8221;, just imagine the possibilities. Sangma cites the German cooperation pact between Angela Merkel8217;s CDU and the Greens to counter a steadily rising Left, and the Pakistani deal between the PPP and the PMLN, united against Musharraf 8212; both coalitions of sloppy compromise 8212; to suggest that a stable marriage between the Big Two could undermine the growing influence of regional parties in India.
Remarkable idea, though it8217;s politically fanciful. The differences between the BJP and the Congress are not just in rhetoric and degree, but principle and instinct 8212; and one of the bigger misapprehensions of the end-of-ideology, managerial governance that people like Sangma advocate is that it undervalues this clash of ideas. Sharply differentiated political formations help individuals find 8220;a choice, not an echo8221;, to borrow a phrase from Barry Goldwater. And if Sangma had looked up from his Agatha Christie instead of dismissing deep disagreements of Parliament as mere din, he might have a keener appreciation for the vital fractiousness of Indian politics.