It’s been a commonly held – and cherished – belief of those of us who live in an India far removed from reality that much of the rot in Indian politics stems from the predominance of uneducated, uncouth and ‘unlike-us’ politicians, and that the entry of more ‘people-like-us’ into politics would – almost magically – change everything.
News flash, people…..there ain’t no magic, though it seems there’s been considerable sleight of hand.
Take the good diplomat-turned-conjurer, Shashi Tharoor. He was everything we hoped for in this new breed of saviour-politician that we so desperately craved. Educated, erudite, intelligent, cultured, professional, progressive, independent (in the sense of not belonging to a political dynasty)…..the adjectives could go on and on. We gave him a long rope and looked on with amused indulgence when he used Twitter almost like a policy forum…..at least he could spell twitter correctly, we thought to ourselves. Finally, we tittered, someone of class amongst the cattle.
And then the man goes and does something stupid. He lobbies for a team on the grounds that it represents his home state, and does not disclose that his girlfriend gets a free equity stake worth a very substantial amount of money in the same team. It reeks of quid pro quo, and when this point was raised – albeit by a man who has quite a few skeletons in the closet himself – it seemed the easiest thing in the world to resort to an ad hominem argument. So we had some smarmy aide of Tharoor implying that all allegations made by Modi were false, because – get this – the accuser was charged with drug possession while a student in the USA, and entered into a plea bargain later. Well, we know that. He may be all that you say he is, and more. But there’s a difference between discrediting the man (an easy enough job, when you consider whom we’re talking about) and discrediting the argument. And the fact is, the allegation has not been refuted. It has been denied and then it has been ignored.
Shashi Tharoor denies any impropriety, but has not bothered to explain how his girlfriend –also referred to as his fiancée – coincidentally, some would say almost magically, happened to get free equity in the very team he lobbied for. And why was this very relevant detail not disclosed in the initial protests of innocence? The lady in question claims that the payment was made in lieu of her ‘marketing expertise’, and that she had also been approached by KKR for similar services – something SRK promptly denied. So if it all seems murky, underhand and tiresomely déjà vu-ish, there’s good reason to believe it probably is. And I’m sorry Shashi, but calling your accuser names and questioning his admittedly ambivalent integrity do not make his accusations false. Though one has to admire the neat side-stepping and evasiveness on your part. One can see why you were such a successful UN employee.
Of course, the Congress spin doctors, aided by the usual suspects in the media, have very competently swung this around. By bringing The Other Modi in, they have ensured the debate about Shashi’s impropriety and possible misuse of power and position gets completely sidelined. Because, as we all know, the moment The Other Modi is brought into the picture, it’s all his fault, blah blah blah, from Dantewada to the Iceland volcano, yada yada yada. And so Shashi Tharoor, like so many before him, and undoubtedly like so many more to follow, survives and lives to lobby another day.
Speaking only for myself, though I have no doubt that others share similar sentiments, I think the ‘who’ is more galling in this case than the betrayal itself. Hell, the ‘betrayal’ itself is so commonplace and pedestrian in post-independence India that we would be surprised if a politician did not take advantage of such opportunities. Only in this case, we were hoping to be surprised. I think what we are most upset about is that our fondest hope – the idea that the ‘right kind’ of person in politics would make a difference – has died a very public death. We were hoping that our fantasies of politicians with integrity would be validated by Shashi’s performance. For wasn’t he almost like our own Clean-Sweep Ignatius? And which is why this incident really rankles. Because it tells us that educated or drop-out, social worker or criminal, professional wrestler or professional diplomat, our politicians are all the same. They are well and truly taking this country down the tubes, and there’s bugger all we can do to stop it.
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Let’s also take a minute to examine our own biases – whether based on caste, gender or class. Many people panned Mayawati for accepting a garland of currency notes. But are we looking the other way now because this time it is a well-groomed, well-spoken man from the right caste and the right political party who is involved?
April 16, 2010 at 2:46 pm
The teflon on Tharoor is wearing off…
April 16, 2010 at 3:15 pm
lol @ at least he could spell twitter correctly!!!
But honestly speaking I am toatlly with you on this. Though the day Tharoor joined INC my expectations from him had dimmed but after this incident I have been telling one & all “I had not expected this Tharoor of all people”. Today I saw that the Gaikwad’s who headed Kochi group and who have now been thrown out from their postions are Ex-Congressmen.
Yesterday when I saw Narendra Modi being dragged into this all I said was “it is getting funnier by minute”. I feel Lalit Modi has all the rights to question the Kochi team about it’s stakeholders!!! I dunno what’s wrong in that!!!
I only wonder where will all this lead to! Will Kochi move to Ahmedabad?? I feel so!!
At the end of the day sab moh maya hai!!! Kahin maale waali and kahin invisble!!!
April 16, 2010 at 3:45 pm
I forget the phrase for this… something to do with slavery of the mind, that persists till today and that makes us consider ‘foreign’ to be an ideal model than the ‘desi’.
April 16, 2010 at 4:59 pm
I had chance to hear him on two occasions. I was convinced that he was too smooth a talker to be trusted.
Very sadly I have been proven right. I would have loved to be wrong!!
April 16, 2010 at 7:00 pm
Quirky Indian,
If you could believe me, I was never enamored by Shashi Tharoor. This is in line with my usual cynicism, that I view all those who rise to power with skepticism. When India was batting for Shashi Tharoor to become the UN secretary, it was another (small) jolt for me, just like Obama winning the Nobel, that in the UN’s scheme of things, ‘batting’ existed. There were talks of ‘who is closer to who’. And I understood what kind of people vie for such positions, & fundamentally what kind of organization UN was.
I had asked elsewhere how does being well educated, articulate, young, ever introduce the right intentions in the person? Rahul Gandhi & Shashi Tharoor had been the cases in point.
Though to be honest, I’m not much disappointed with Tharoor. In contemporary politics, as you rightly pointed out, this was a very small crime. And I think it silly of the BJP to pursue the issue so aggressively. What I’ve been more curious of is, what’s been his role in policy-making?!!! But yes, bringing into picture Lalit’s past, Narendra Modi & Raje were stupid things to do that I had not expected of Tharoor (because I consider him clever, & not ‘cuz I expect him to be ethical!). So I guess, those decisions were taken by the Goddess. 😉
As of now, am hopeful of the other Modi. But I do try to temper my expectations of him. Of course, he’s a very cunning politician, & I’d be wrong to expect him to follow ideals blindly. It is said, for example, he’d deliberately not campaigned during elections in (corrupt) dissenters’ constituencies who then lost elections, and had thus ‘weeded’ them out as he was confident of getting majority even without winning those seats! But at least till now I haven’t seen him do things detrimental to the state of Gujarat, & from whatever I hear from my relatives living there & other people, he’s a very good administrator who’s shown results through sensible policies.
I just hope this incident serves as a lesson & more & more people assimilate the maxim – “dikhaon pe mat jaao, apni akla lagaao” – not just for politics, but other areas of life, too!
I’d been reading this “quid pro quo” many times, but hadn’t seen its meaning, now that you used it, finally I did. 🙂
Why did this post have very little attempt at humor? Don’t tell me incident itself was intrinsically funny! Were you disappointed or surprised by this?
April 16, 2010 at 7:08 pm
Also, from a legal perspective case against Tharoor might not be very strong on two counts:
1. He’s not related to Sunanda in any official way.
2. It was within rights of Rendezvous Sports World to award her the free equity. If she pays tax on income she earns, it would be no one’s business asking if free equity she got was justified. This is my understanding of things as they stand, & I could be wrong.
April 16, 2010 at 7:12 pm
Sorry, one more most important interesting thing, I guess Lalit Modi has not even uttered Tharoor’s name anywhere in the entire controversy! He’d only raised doubts against composition of Kochi franchisee! Isn’t that clever? 😉
April 16, 2010 at 7:23 pm
[…] post: Only Cattle, Still No Class « The Quirky Indian Politics ADD COMMENTS You can leave a response, or trackback from your own […]
April 16, 2010 at 8:18 pm
[…] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Indyeah, The Quirky Indian. The Quirky Indian said: The Tharoor-Modi soap opera. Action bhi, drama bhi, romance bhi. https://quirkyindian.wordpress.com/2010/04/16/only-cattle-still-no-class/ […]
April 16, 2010 at 9:08 pm
Came here via Indyeah’s tweet!
You have expressed here what we were discussing at home, Q.I.! I was a great fan of Shashi Tharoor and used to read his column in Indian Express, Sunday supplementary and all of us in our family used to admire him because of the articles. And he was in the UN and ran for the top post over there too. When he came back to Indian politics, we were really happy, as you said, here…
‘I think what we are most upset about is that our fondest hope – the idea that the right ‘kind’ of person in politics would make a difference – has died a very public death’ – we are cursed to stay with Mayavati-like politicians forever.
April 17, 2010 at 12:14 am
Interesting.. did you read the story in Business Standard on the same?
http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/of-intriguearm-twisting-in-high-places/391883/
April 17, 2010 at 1:29 am
Tharoor just pulled an Obama http://twitter.com/ShashiTharoor/status/12295839592
“Thanks for all the support &good wishes.U folks are the new India.We will “be the change” we wish to see in our country. But not w’out pain!”
April 18, 2010 at 4:52 am
Such a pity, that Tharoor turned out to be just another politician. You are bang on, when you say, we expected him to be a new gen saviour politician. Our hopes are indeed dashed. Such a shame!!
As always, an insightful post, Quirky. Loved the ‘classy’ title too 🙂
April 18, 2010 at 10:31 pm
Quirky Indian,
In one of my above comments, I had meant to ask if you were disappointed by how specifically Tharoor has ‘turned out’, or in other words you were also expecting him to be somehow ‘better’?
Maneka Gandhi is angry with the title of this post as her pet bullock from Patna feels insulted with your usage of ‘cattle’ & is refusing to eat his fodder. 😉 No, but don’t celebrate yet. 😀
On a very unrelated note, I realized some time back BR Ambedkar was indeed very far-sighted & understood India & Indians very well. Probably, it was my laziness (not reading sufficiently before forming opinion), prejudice (“caste-based reservations are because of him” – an almost a myth) & ignorance (partly owing to very little being taught about his ideas in the school), that I had held my stubborn view. I stand corrected, & am (again) impressed by the clarity with which you can see things. 🙂
April 19, 2010 at 1:25 am
It would be amusing if most of the comments here are by same people posting under various names.
http://supporttharoor.org/
But if they are truly fanboys (and surprisingly, few of girls), then there’s reason to worry more about our country. 😦 Truly wondering if education & ability to communicate in English can create a cult of their own.
April 19, 2010 at 7:49 am
Good post. I was surprised that so many ppl were taken in by Tharoor’s smooth talking. May be it was just a ‘you talk and tweet like us’ phenomenon. Tharoor’s achievements if any I am yet to understand. The way he became a resident of Kerala months before 09 elections showed his hunger for power and money and fame. It is said that he spend a big amount just to get a ticket. His foolish utterances in public was a big headache to Gov.This incident shows he was not even clever enough to hide his trail while accepting bribes,a lesson most ppl learn early. Politicians are like us, some good and some bad and others in between.
April 19, 2010 at 2:48 pm
Exactly same point we were discussing/debating in the lunch break sometime back..If white collored ppl like Tharoor are not trustworthy..whom should we look upto then?
April 22, 2010 at 9:01 am
This is a nice post. I was forwarded a rebuttal today by a close associate of Tharoor who argued that since Tharoor was no fool, and only a fool would engage in such acts, he must have been framed.
With such logic, it is no wonder that we have an unjust justice system!
April 23, 2010 at 3:07 am
ST thought he was a holy cow. Buffeted by his twitter supporters.
Adulation I understand. Blind bhakti I don’t.
Probe the cases against him. Period.
April 24, 2010 at 10:25 am
Here is a poem a friend wrote:
http://rotteneggstrikes.blogspot.com/2010/04/from-troor-fan-club.html
April 26, 2010 at 8:12 pm
Wow, QI! This is what I’ve been missing. An understated but still scathing piece on the Tharoor-o-mania.
Earlier when he was taken out of context by the media on his cattle class comment, I really felt for the guy.
Again as these things unfolded, I gave him the benefit of doubt thinkin his girl friend might really have been a marketing expert. But the way things are now, it is indeed painful to see him go down the political gutter.
April 28, 2010 at 6:27 am
In line with the Indian tradition rushing to find heroes to put on pedestals and watching them come crumbling down.
April 29, 2010 at 9:57 pm
The ease with which an allegedly corrupt politician was got rid of makes me suspect that all is not what it seems.
I am used to inquiries and committees, I guess we will get used to this new wave of honesty in politics 🙂