This blog is written by a journalist based in Mumbai who writes about cities, the environment, developmental issues, the media, women and many other subjects.The title 'ulti khopdi' is a Hindi phrase referring to someone who likes to look at things from the other side.
Tuesday, April 23, 2019
Has Priyanka Chaturvedi failed women by joining the Shiv Sena – or shown how to survive in politics?
Priyanka Chaturvedi has failed women in politics. Or perhaps she is showing them the only way to survive.
On April 17, Chaturvedi, then the Congress spokesperson and a familiar face on TV debates, expressed disappointment
with her party for having reinstated eight members she referred to as
“lumpen goons”. She had accused them last October of misbehaving with
her. Pending an inquiry, they were suspended. But earlier this week they
were taken back, apparently after they apologised.
The next day, Chaturvedi sent her resignation letter
to Congress chief Rahul Gandhi. “What saddens me is that despite the
safety, dignity and empowerment of women being promoted by the party…and
your call to action, the same is not reflected in the action of some of
members of the party,” she wrote. “A serious incident and misbehaviour
by certain party members while I was on official duty for the party has
been ignored under the guise of all hands needed for the elections.”
However,
in less than 24 hours, Chaturvedi did a virtual double backflip and on
Friday landed in the lap of the Shiv Sena, which is at the other end of
the ideological spectrum from her former party. By doing so, she not
only provided an escape hatch for the Congress, which was being
questioned about not treating her charges seriously, but also provoked
considerable scepticism about her own motives.
Coincidentally, the
same day, a veteran woman politician, Mayawati of the Bahujan Samaj
Party, demonstrated that pragmatism can trump old fissures by sharing a
stage with her former arch rival, Mulayam Singh Yadav of the Samajwadi
Party, for the first time since 1995.
Mayawati had sworn never to
forgive Yadav after his party’s workers attacked her at a Lucknow guest
house in June 1995, almost battering down the doors of the room in
which she had locked herself.
Just another day in Indian
politics, you might say, especially in an election season. But apart
from demonstrating the malleability and flexibility that seems to be the
hallmark of Indian politics and politicians, these events remind us of
the anomalies and contradictions of a woman’s role in this country’s
politics.
Take Chaturvedi. Though originally from Uttar Pradesh,
she is a typical Mumbai person. She is well-spoken and articulate and
appeared to be an asset for the Congress in its attempt to project
itself as a modern and progressive party in contrast to its main
opponent, the Bharatiya Janata Party.
At the April 19 press
conference where she announced her decision to join the Shiv Sena and
serve it in any capacity, Chaturvedi was asked whether she quit the
Congress because she was denied a ticket to contest the parliamentary
election.
Chaturvedi acknowledged she had hoped to get a ticket,
but insisted that was not the main reason for her resignation. She spoke
of her concern for women’s rights even as she sat on a dais with only
male leaders of the Shiv Sena, a party which is not exactly an exemplar
either of good behaviour or of upholding women’s rights. She appears to
have missed the irony entirely, or perhaps deliberately.
A misogynistic culture
For
a moment, though, if we set aside the pragmatism displayed by Mayawati
in putting aside her resentment and sharing the stage with her bitter
adversary, and Chaturvedi’s nifty ideological cartwheel, the two women
illustrate the challenges women in politics face in India.
Mayawati’s struggles are now well known. She has confronted the double
burden of being a Dalit and a woman, been called all kinds of names,
criticised and mocked for her dress sense, her taste, her looks. She has
received barely any appreciation for her ability to negotiate the snake
pit of politics. A man in her position would have been lauded as
clever, strategic, even brilliant. But Mayawati is called devious,
corrupt, unprincipled and much more because she is a woman. Mayawati
with Mulayam Singh Yadav and his on Akhilesh Yadav at a campaign rally
in Mainpuri, Uttar Pradesh, on April 19. Photo credit: Twitter/Samajwadi
Party Chaturvedi is fairly new to politics and
has had a relatively easy run. She was picked out to be a spokesperson
because she speaks well and knows how to handle the medium of TV. In the
last five years, with the BJP in power, she has been targeted as a
woman, viciously trolled and even threatened. Her apparent reason for
quitting the Congress was also misogyny. That men in the party felt they
could get away with the kind of behaviour that Chaturvedi alleges with a
prominent woman functionary speaks to male entitlement and a
misogynistic culture that is virtually a norm in Indian politics.
Mayawati and Chaturvedi are not the exceptions by a long shot. Go back in history and remember the kind of treatment J Jayalalithaa
received, especially shortly after MG Ramachandran’s death in 1989,
when she was assaulted and almost stripped in the Tamil Nadu Assembly.
Similarly, Mamata Banerjee has been physically assaulted and received the choicest sexist epithets from her male opponents.
Smriti Irani
may have laid herself open to criticism with her imaginative
descriptions of her educational qualification, but she too has had to
endure sexual and sexist comments by male politicians.
The most recent illustration of the special treatment reserved for women is what Jaya Prada,
until recently with the Samajwadi Party and now a BJP candidate, has
had to endure from former party colleague Azam Khan. Even when they were
in the same party, Khan did not spare her.
Par for the course
Sexism,
it seems, is par for the course if you are a woman stepping into the
male world of Indian politics. The women who have survived have all had
to face this in some form or another. If they have a male protector, in
the form of a relative or a mentor, they are sometimes spared. But that
too is no guarantee. Nor is the party to which they belong. So, the list
includes, among others, Sonia Gandhi, Renuka Chowdhury and Priyanka
Gandhi from the Congress; Sushma Swaraj, Smriti Irani and Hema Malini of
the BJP; and Mayawati and Jaya Prada.
As Scroll.in reported this month,
it is no different even in a state like Kerala, with high female
literacy and more women voters than men. There too women hesitate to
enter politics and political parties have historically been extremely
parsimonious about encouraging women to be a part of electoral politics.
Since 1957, the state has elected only 11 women to Parliament. And the
handful of women who are standing for the Lok Sabha this time have not
been spared sexist remarks from male politicians.
Chaturvedi
claims she quit the Congress because it failed to act against sexism.
Yet, by joining the Shiv Sena she has behaved like any male politician
looking out for the best chance would. She has also reinforced the
belief that for the moment, if women want to get ahead in the male world
of politics, they have to be a little like them. The misogynistic and
masculine culture that dominates Indian politics remains undented by the
presence of such women.
Knowing that politics in India is male dominated, women entering it, do so only knowingly and willingly. Upon entry, she is as much a human as others in the field and by virtue of human tendency to strive and aspire to be active and in limelight would be constrained to do all that is required as long as it is within the realm of possibilities. There is nothing wrong in it either. Hence Priyanka Chaturvedhi’s act is one of survival in politics without failing women for whom her support is bound to continue.
Sexist remarks is the order of the day not just in India but across countries as well. During his election campaign, Trump unhesitatingly used words to his advantage and to undermine his rival. Therasa May could become PM only because of a gender related comment made by her competitor. In conservative and religion minded countries like Islamic countries, Women face more ordeals and slanderous remarks yet successful are those who rise above the accusations and allegations.
A Soldier in discharge of his responsibilities is born to die. Death in battle is a pride and not agony. Likewise a Politician however much his charisma may be is born to battle with peers and people through words and deeds in discharge of his/her responsibilities. There is nothing high or low in it. It is time and situation centered with success remaining ultimate goal.
1 comment:
Knowing that politics in India is male dominated, women entering it, do so only knowingly and willingly. Upon entry, she is as much a human as others in the field and by virtue of human tendency to strive and aspire to be active and in limelight would be constrained to do all that is required as long as it is within the realm of possibilities. There is nothing wrong in it either. Hence Priyanka Chaturvedhi’s act is one of survival in politics without failing women for whom her support is bound to continue.
Sexist remarks is the order of the day not just in India but across countries as well. During his election campaign, Trump unhesitatingly used words to his advantage and to undermine his rival. Therasa May could become PM only because of a gender related comment made by her competitor. In conservative and religion minded countries like Islamic countries, Women face more ordeals and slanderous remarks yet successful are those who rise above the accusations and allegations.
A Soldier in discharge of his responsibilities is born to die. Death in battle is a pride and not agony. Likewise a Politician however much his charisma may be is born to battle with peers and people through words and deeds in discharge of his/her responsibilities. There is nothing high or low in it. It is time and situation centered with success remaining ultimate goal.
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