A cousin of mine undertakes government contractual labour work at major ports of western India. For this, he has to frequently deal with politicians and political parties of both Gujarat and Maharashtra. He maintains that corruption pervades in both states but the ones in Maharashtra have an extremely 'Big Mouth' and keep stalling the contract by not sticking to their word and rampant misuse of their position. Now, as a Mumbaikar , I am all too familiar with corruption in daily life, but it is big ticket corruption like the Adarsh Scam, the builder-politician nexus in Mumbai-Pune area and the recently uncovered irrigation scam and co-operative bank scams that grab headlines.
Troubled by the tarnished image of the ruling coalition, Prithviraj Chavan was made the CM of Maharashtra with a single point agenda. To do a Clean-Up Act in Maharashtra and refurbish the image of Congress. I think he has done a commendable job in the matter. The builder lobby in Mumbai seems to have been cornered with a new Housing Regulatory Act which addresses the majority of issues faced by the Mumbai residents. The infrastructure projects seem to have gathered pace with fast track clearances of major projects. One might say that the CM has taken the job a bit too seriously resulting in exposing the alleged corruption charges of his cabinet colleagues from the NCP. To make matters worse for NCP, the opposition parties in the BJP and Shiv Sena have sustained the attack on corruption charges against its ministers and the party has suffered a serious blow. Now, the NCP is up in arms against the Congress demanding the ouster of the CM and have a pliable person occupy the position so that status quo can be achieved. Even a few Congressmen are unhappy with the CM's cautious (judicious?) approach. However, the Congress high command (Madame Sonia Gandhi) is firmly behind his man and would have none of the NCP tantrums.
A major hindrance in the CM's repertoire is that the Congress has failed to win a single election (local body or Municipal Corporation) including the high profile BMC elections under the leadership of Prithviraj Chavan. Recently, polls were conducted in my municipality (MBMC- Mira Bhayandar Municipal Council) and the congress's tally came down to half of its previous count. The CM himself had campaigned in the area and yet the Congress failed miserably. One may argue that local body elections are more about local leaders and local issues yet the issue that the CM is not a crowd puller and has minimal flamboyance cannot be ignored (the CMs rally near my home could only muster crowd in the low thousands). The Maharashtra elections are scheduled in the second half of 2014 which means the CM has another 2 years to prove that he is indeed a mass leader. Also, this could be the acid test for the people of Maharashtra to show that good governance at the state level is indeed rewarded and that development is only criteria in choosing our leaders as opposed to caste, culture, religion and money power. It is time that the media and we the people overcome the stereotype of blaming all politicians for what is wrong with the country and back a clean and stable government for a better Mumbai and Maharashtra.
Troubled by the tarnished image of the ruling coalition, Prithviraj Chavan was made the CM of Maharashtra with a single point agenda. To do a Clean-Up Act in Maharashtra and refurbish the image of Congress. I think he has done a commendable job in the matter. The builder lobby in Mumbai seems to have been cornered with a new Housing Regulatory Act which addresses the majority of issues faced by the Mumbai residents. The infrastructure projects seem to have gathered pace with fast track clearances of major projects. One might say that the CM has taken the job a bit too seriously resulting in exposing the alleged corruption charges of his cabinet colleagues from the NCP. To make matters worse for NCP, the opposition parties in the BJP and Shiv Sena have sustained the attack on corruption charges against its ministers and the party has suffered a serious blow. Now, the NCP is up in arms against the Congress demanding the ouster of the CM and have a pliable person occupy the position so that status quo can be achieved. Even a few Congressmen are unhappy with the CM's cautious (judicious?) approach. However, the Congress high command (Madame Sonia Gandhi) is firmly behind his man and would have none of the NCP tantrums.
A major hindrance in the CM's repertoire is that the Congress has failed to win a single election (local body or Municipal Corporation) including the high profile BMC elections under the leadership of Prithviraj Chavan. Recently, polls were conducted in my municipality (MBMC- Mira Bhayandar Municipal Council) and the congress's tally came down to half of its previous count. The CM himself had campaigned in the area and yet the Congress failed miserably. One may argue that local body elections are more about local leaders and local issues yet the issue that the CM is not a crowd puller and has minimal flamboyance cannot be ignored (the CMs rally near my home could only muster crowd in the low thousands). The Maharashtra elections are scheduled in the second half of 2014 which means the CM has another 2 years to prove that he is indeed a mass leader. Also, this could be the acid test for the people of Maharashtra to show that good governance at the state level is indeed rewarded and that development is only criteria in choosing our leaders as opposed to caste, culture, religion and money power. It is time that the media and we the people overcome the stereotype of blaming all politicians for what is wrong with the country and back a clean and stable government for a better Mumbai and Maharashtra.


