Asia

In Indian democracy, minuscule intelligentsia tend to overwhelm majority view

Democracy is all about free speech, divergent views, tolerance and accommodation. But unity in diversity alone sustains a democratic nation. Democracy is by the people, of the people and for the people. However, everything gets decided by majority opinion in a democracy.
From panchayats to Parliament, a representative of the people gets elected on securing highest number of votes. A political party, or a coalition of parties, forms government, if it gets support of majority of members in a legislature. A law gets enacted only if it is approved by a majority of members in the House.
The Supreme Court decides mundane, important as well as constitutional issues based on the opinions of majority of judges on the bench. Howsoever one may like or is convinced about minority views, what holds good is the majority view.
Thinness of majority does not diminish the sanctity of a decision, law, or a government. But in India, there has been a tendency, fuelled by the compulsively contrarian intelligentsia, to undermine the majority view. Freedom of speech is a fundamental right. But does it make every view of a contrarian fundamentally right?
Indian National Congress shaped Indias freedom struggle and democratic structure. Sadly, it could neither achieve unity on its idea of India nor could it accommodate divergent views. It led to Indias vivisection, murders of millions of partition-forced migrants and assassination of Mahatma Gandhi.
In the 1930s, INC dramatically expanded its membership base, especially after winning provincial elections in 1937, from 6 lakh to around 40 lakh. In 1938, Subhas Chandra Bose was nominated INC president. He championed nationalism in the freedom struggle.
In 1939, Bose sought re-election on the twin agenda — launching a nationwide struggle against the Federation and opposing welltrenched leaders by branding them as compromisers. Mahatma Gandhi and a majority of Congress Working Committee members supported Pattabhi Sitaramayyas candidature for party president. Bose got elected with 1,575 votes. Sitaramayya, despite the support of Gandhi and other stalwarts, got only 1,376 votes.
Gandhiji called Sitaramayyas loss his personal defeat, triggering inner-party turbulence. Those in the minority controlled the party narrative. Wounded by sharp comments, Bose resigned. The minority view trumped the majority. A new trend took root in democracy — having majority support was one thing, but the reins of real power lay with those who penned and propagated the narrative.
Congress and Gandhiji repeated the experiment when it came to choosing the first prime minister. By April 1946, Gandhiji had made his choice — Jawaharlal Nehru. But the overwhelming majority favoured Sardar Patel, who got support from 12 out of 15 Pradesh Congress Committees. If Patel had the majority, Nehru had Gandhiji. And we know who became the PM. The cardinality of majority view in democracy was lost forever.
While framing the Constitution, the contentious Uniform Civil Code was fiercely debated. The majority supported UCC. It was staunchly opposed by Muslim leaders, especially Hussain Imam from Bihar. B R Ambedkar repudiated Muslims claim that Shariat law was immutably and uniformly in vogue for centuries across the country.
Ambedkar said till 1937, the North West Frontier Province, United Province, Central Province and Bombay followed Hindu law on succession issues. But he bowed to the minority view and agreed to place UCC in Article 44 in Directive Principles chapter of the Constitution. The majority view again lost.
Parliament codified Hindu personal laws in 1955-56. There was an overwhelming demand for similar codification of Muslim personal law. Muslims opposed it. Nehru came to their rescue. He did not support it saying the Muslim community was not yet ready for codification of its personal laws.
Since then, demand for UCC has grown shriller. The Supreme Court has repeatedly told governments, since 1985, that UCC is a must for India. In the Shah Bano case in 1985, the SC had said, “A common civil code will help the cause of national integration by removing dispRead More – Source

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