Login Register
Follow Us

Modi after one year

Arun Shourie summed it up rightly: “The plates are rattling but there is still no sign of food”.

Show comments

 Arun Shourie summed it up rightly: “The plates are rattling but there is still no sign of food”. Going by media surveys, a majority still believes Modi will deliver. He still has four years to live up to the expectations he has raised. What do we applaud Modi for? The list can be long but here are key points: foreign policy, connecting with diaspora, helping quake-hit Nepal, making ministers and bureaucrats work and behave, coal and spectrum auctions, ‘Man ki Baat’, Swachh Bharat, Make in India, Skill India, Ganga cleanup, controlling inflation ( helped by cheaper oil), managing fiscal and current account deficits, and launching pension, life and accident insurance schemes. 

The Modi government’s neglect of agriculture can be disastrous as saffronisation of education. The number of farmer suicides has shot up alarmingly, the rains may be deficient this year and farm product prices have slumped. The crazy push for the land Bill may backfire. No one tells him to take it easy. A control freak, Modi does not let his ministers speak, but Parivar elements are allowed a free run. Julio Ribeiro's airing of minority concerns was widely noticed as also Modi's silence. The Delhi debacle showed the Modi-Amit Shah duo is not invincible. 

Modi talks big. That quality catapulted him to power and may well cause his undoing. His Republic Day speech lifted his political stock, which was hit subsequently by his irrational comments on the practice of genetic science and plastic surgery in ancient India as also the thoughtless observation that he was ashamed of being an Indian before occupying the PM Office. One wonders if it is the same man speaking — one who can be so comfortable with Obama and Xi Jinping. When he promises bullet trains or 100 smart cities, he leaves ordinary mortals wondering: Where is the money? Should that be the priority when countrywide towns and cities are so chaotic and unlivable? His emphasis on digital India may be just gas especially when no one seems to know how to fix the mobile network. The promise-performance divide may grow and ultimately ground him.

Show comments
Show comments

Top News

View All

Scottish Sikh artist Jasleen Kaur shortlisted for prestigious Turner Prize

Jasleen Kaur, in her 30s, has been nominated for her solo exhibition entitled ‘Alter Altar' at Tramway contemporary arts venue in Glasgow

Amritsar: ‘Jallianwala Bagh toll 57 more than recorded’

GNDU team updates 1919 massacre toll to 434 after two-year study

Meet Gopi Thotakura, a pilot set to become 1st Indian to venture into space as tourist

Thotakura was selected as one of the six crew members for the mission, the flight date of which is yet to be announced

Most Read In 24 Hours