SwamyG wrote:Shaurya: We have our babudom, that is as institutionalized as any other. They might not work and please us all the time. But they are better than one party blackmailing the entire country.
Atleast the party represents the people, even if not to your liking and can be changed by the people. In a non fractured polity this is normal and healthy.
The question is what is the right balance for a fractured polity, such as India. What I mean by a fractured polity is fundamental differences on vision and ideas of what constitutes Indian interests or a sufficient understanding of it.
In our case, the babudom is in collusion with the political executive that presides over it and this political executive is in turn part of the legislature, which in turn is controlled by a party. In our case, now it is a party that is headed by a dynasty. The entire concept of checks and balances breaks down because of this collusion and no systemic set of rules and procedures that codify this separation. It gets all the more challenging, when the original rules with colonial origins and were never designed for the welfare of the people in mind. It was designed to ensure political control. Political control was the design intent of our system and that is exactly what our system excels at.
What is codified into rules is the idea that this babudom shall be controlled by this political executive.
What is needed here is to separate this executive head at the three levels of government (District/City, State, National) and make them accountable to both the people directly and indirectly through elected representatives at these three levels (Nagarpalikas, State Sansad and Parliament).
There is a measure of separation between the courts and the executive and hence it works somewhat better than the other two branches, however, serious reform is needed here to make the courts work at lower levels, where accountability is seriously missing. (example: let a district court judge stand for elections?).
The Jan Lok Pal is a dire measure for dire times but more normal mode of operations, would be best accomplished through institutional restructuring and reforms.