Veerappa Moily,newly sworn in as Union minister for law and justice,is evidently a man of many words. Hes the author of fifteen reports of the Second Administrative Reforms Commission ARC,tomes on revenue and tax reform,a five-volume epic poem,and a two-part Musings on India. But now he will be held to his first utterances in his capacity as law minister,to undertake reform that was so consistently ignored by his predecessor,H.R. Bharadwaj. He has promised to address the 30 million-plus case backlog and tackle the biggest litigant of them all,the government. He has also spoken of bolstering the police system to reduce the
burden on the courts,and talked of the need for the rule of law to reach the poorest of litigants.
As chief minister of Karnataka,Moily got a lot of credit for reforming the states higher education system. His ideas on police reform were implemented post-haste after the Mumbai attack of November 2008,and his recommendations
on revenue reform have made a difference at the Centre and state levels. But given the task ahead,and given that the new UPA government has shown the most decisive personnel changes in the HRD and law ministries,it is on his record now that his reputation will ultimately rest.