A few
days ago, as I was flipping through the channels I landed on NDTV and there was
a “debate” going on about Sachin Tendulkar’s nomination to Rajya Sabha, on the
Prime Minister’s quota (pardon the mild sense of derision in this sentence; he
came in on the sportsman quota, not explicitly sanctioned by the constitution,
after all). People, obviously cued in on by the host, were debating what Tendulkar
had done, how is he appropriate for this post, why not Sourav Ganguly or Sunil
Gavaskar and other such truly weighty matters.
So,
it was a comparative debate and the normative questions – how does Tendulkar
qualify at all, or the more generic, how would any sportsperson qualify – were
never asked. Apparently, the constitution lists only four categories– literature,
science, art and social service – as the basis for nomination. And Tendulkar
may sneak in only through social service. How, you ask? He has peddled so many
different consumer products and has helped the Indian economy grow. That is
truly social service.
As
I am in no mood to screen all the past nominations where such untenable and extended
justifications may have been given, I am taking it upon myself only to compare
and contrast Tendulkar’s with those of Rekha and ‘Anu’ Aga, the other nominees in
this group. This too is going to be a comparative exercise.
Rekha.
Oh, that lady of the bright red lipstick fame! I have seen many movies featuring
her, including the eminently forgettable Khiladiyon
ka Khiladi. She did have a hold on a segment (front benchers, and I am one
of them) of the movie going public and whether you like it or not, she was held
up as a fashion icon (Yuk!). She is a non-controversial nomination, even if
only for the reason that her profession comes under art, a valid category under
the Indian constitution. Tendulkar loses to Rekha.
But,
not so fast. Both Rekha and Sachin have entertained people, the latter perhaps
more. And, art is entertainment. Therefore, there are still some points of
debates to choose between Rekha and Sachin. I will leave you to do that, as
homework.
Till
she got nominated for the Rajya Sabha I did not know who ‘Anu’ Aga was. Only
subsequently, upon googling did I find out some details about her, the third in
this set. She is Arnawaz ‘Anu’ Aga. And, she headed a large energy and
environmental engineering company Thermax.
She is, to put it mildly, excessively rich, but I am sure she would not admit
to that, pointing fingers at richer Indians (this is the game rich people play;
do the poor envy poorer people?). She is, as per a news release on the occasion
of her being nominated for Rajya Sabha, on the social work ticket. But,
curiously, she embarked on being a social worker “after retiring from Thermax” as its Chairman, in 2004, a full eight
years of social service to get a Rajya Sabha nomination.
Now,
Aga is not so obviously superior to Tendulkar in her claims to the “honor” of
being a Rajya Sabha MP. (That claim, in a commentary piece made me chuckle. How
can opening oneself to the possibility of footwear/mikes etc. being hurled at
be an “honor”?) Tendulkar has not retired. And, as I mentioned above, he has
boosted the Indian economy. Moreover, he had vowed that he would never endorse
alcohol – such a goody-two-shoes!
So,
it is a toss-up between Sachin and Anu.
I
believe the debaters on TV would have done better had they done a comparative
exercise similar to the one I have done above. Their debate would have been
more interesting and caught more eyeballs.
Raghuram
Ekambaram
2 comments:
I suppose it is quite clear why people like Sachin and Rekha should enter the Rajya Sabha. They won't matter there at all. They will just sit there looking idiotic if at all they'll enter the sessions!
Matheikal, do you think Anu Aga will do anything different? Actually, I think the framers of the constitution were looking for some simple tasks to be imposed on the useless post of president. And, this is one of them, nominating people to that dysfunctional outfit called Rajya Sabha. A dysfunctional functionary supports a dysfunctional institution of our governance.
RE
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