Rather than take as an axiom that no dynast can survive in a true Indian democracy, I would regard it as a hypothesis- albeit a good one that has maybe ~80% probability of holding true. It does seem to be the case that a dynast in India essentially survives on appeasement of strong minority interests which in a FPTP system can ensure repeated electoral wins.Sanku wrote:The axiom here is of course no dynast can survive in a true democracy, if however a dynast can indeed establish himself democratically, he is no longer a dynast but a Appointed kingly ruler in the old Indian mold (a Indian king would also often win elections on popularity quite easily) -- even if born in a family.
However, it is also true that the concept of family / lineage is far more central to an Indian voter's thinking than to one in the West. Just take as example the number of star-progeny and khandaans that populate Bollywood....clearly there is a cultural tendency in India that judges people by their family background / surname more than for their individual strengths. I would therefore not rule out the possiblity that Indians in general have a tendency to give more weightage to surname than compared with the West.
Rather than concluding that this means he is no longer a dynast but more like a popular king - I would look for an extra means / regulation to ensure that what I would regard as an Indian failing does not lead to subversion of core principles of democracy. The US prohibits anyone from standing for more than 2 terms as President - so even if Bill Clinton could have won the popular vote if that rule were not there - the US constitution very rightly puts a bar on it. Similarly, even if the popular vote in India does go to a dynast there has to be some limit such that family rule does not cross a bar that can be regarded as egregious.
You might ask , what exactly is egregious? Well, that is to be defined....but the 5th member of a dynasty taking control of nation's destiny as PM / Party President within a period of six decades - definitely crosses the bar several times over. It is feudalistic, and by concentrating power in a single family / oligopoly stifles meritocracy and promotes corruption. So long-short if this is, in the event that resolving FPTP (presumably through runoff for top 2 candidates) still does not result in elimination of dynastic politics - then specific limits on families occupying PM / Party President posts need to be brought in.