Atal’s oddity

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If india was looking towards the general elections to clear some of the uncertainties that cloud the political horizon, it could not have been more baffled. The single largest party that derided the shaky coalition of 13 regional parties which preceded it as a "khichdi government" is now in power with the strangest of coalition partners and a truly fractured mandate.

While the United Front government had a common minimum programme, a reasonable claim to representing regional interests and a commitment to the basic tenets of the Indian Constitution, the Bharatiya Janata Party-led government is on a different turf altogether. It does not believe in the pluralistic cultural and national ethos enshrined in the Indian Constitution. The BJP has never fought shy of proclaiming its commitment to "Hindutva" though it has now toned down its shrill accents in deference to some of its allies. To confound confusion, it has been joined by some of the very United Front constituents which had vowed to fight its coming to power because of its declared pro-Hindu biases.

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