A major reason why the forthcoming general elections may not usher in  political stability is the moral and intellectual bankruptcy of today's  leaders. As a result, governance is likely to remain mired in scams,  indecision and unethical compromises in the foreseeable future.
It  is a truism that the political standards have been falling over the  years. But the yawning holes which the decline has opened up were  camouflaged for a time by the presence of several seemingly laudable  personalities - seemingly because the dearth of their cerebral and  ethical calibre was not so apparent earlier. But the deficiencies are  out in the open now. 
Among those who have let their admirers  down are Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Congress president Sonia  Gandhi. It may be recalled that prior to the Congress's return to power  in 2004, Sonia Gandhi had consistently secured high ratings in the  opinion polls. These were only a few points below those of the Bharatiya  Janata Party's Atal Bihari Vajpayee, who was then prime minister and  invariably headed the popularity charts.
Now the scene is  different. While Vajpayee has retired from public life and Sonia  Gandhi's party is facing a rout, no one has appeared in the BJP who is  anywhere near Vajpayee's stature. What is even more ironical is that the  person - Narendra Modi - who was held responsible by Vajpayee himself  for the party's defeat in 2004 for failing to control the 2002 Gujarat  riots, is today the BJP's poll mascot.
Nothing shows more starkly  the lowering of the perception of leadership qualities than Modi's  nomination as the BJP's prime ministerial candidate despite opposition  from the party's octogenarian mentor, L.K. Advani, and others like  Sushma Swaraj, though in a more muted form. What is also significant is  that the BJP found no one else since all its other contenders had some  flaw or the other.
Advani, for instance, was thought to have  exceeded the "sell by" date because of age, although he was the saffron  brotherhood's hero in the 1990s. And Sushma Swaraj was presumed to be  too excitable to be the party's nominee because her oratorical skills  were overshadowed by the tendency to fly off the handle, as when she  threatened to shave her head if "foreigner" Sonia Gandhi became prime  minister, or suggested that the heads of 10 Pakistani soldiers should be  cut off in retaliation for the beheading of an Indian soldier. 
It  is leadership failures of this nature, underlining the absence of  inspiring personalities, which have cast a shadow on the possibility of  the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA) reaching the 272-seat  mark in the 545-member Lok Sabha (two members are nominated) to form a  government. There are even doubts whether the BJP will be able to  attract a sufficient number of allies to cross the magic figure because  of Modi's past when he was castigated by Vajpayee for failing to observe  the raj dharma, or the duties of governance, during the communal  outbreak in 2002.
If the BJP hasn't found anyone who fits  Vajpayee's shoes, the Congress, too, has been at a loss after Rajiv  Gandhi's death. There is little doubt that he was the Last of the  Mohicans even if the later stages of his prime ministerial tenure were  marred by the Bofors howitzer scandal. Even then, the electoral defeat  of 1989 apparently made him realize the need for making amends.
In  contrast, the present-day members of the Nehru-Gandhi family appear to  be clueless about the reasons why their party is going down. They are  even reluctant to appear on television lest their vacuity is exposed. It  isn't only that Rahul Gandhi has shied away from a second TV interview  after the first one showed him to be hesitant, even the otherwise  combative Modi turned down a Facebook-sponsored question-and-answer  session in case he is asked whether he told the police to go easy on the  rioters in 2002.
If the Congress leaders had undertaken a "deep  introspection" of the party's problems, which Sonia Gandhi promised  after the Congress's 0-4 drubbing in Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh,  Rajasthan and Delhi last year, they would have realized that none of the  government's flagship programmes - the right to food, the right to  employment, the right to education - had helped the party.
Yet,  it doesn't take great political acumen to understand that this typical  Left-oriented as well as feudal outlook of a supposedly benevolent  government and a munificent dynasty is out of sync with the open economy  which India embraced in 1991. What is unfortunate is that the man who  presided over the liberalization of the economy as finance minister two  decades ago meekly allowed the slow return of the discredited  licence-permit-control raj because of his reluctance to oppose Sonia  Gandhi's socialistic preferences.
He did know what was going  wrong for he said, in reference to the environment ministry under  Jayanthi Natarajan, that the restrictions of the licence raj were being  restored. He also said that the Left's "outdated ideology" had no place  in India. But he allowed the profligate rights-based programmes to  impose an unbearable burden on the economy. Had he shown greater  firmness in pushing forward his neo-liberal views, neither the country  nor the party would have been in such dire straits as now.
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