Winners and Losers, All

Maulana Wahiduddin Khan I The Speaking Tree I May 18

Democracy has changed the concept of victory and defeat. Elections bring in change, albeit temporarily. The winning team is now here to serve for a period of five years. The losing team, now the opposition, is equally important as the nation’s conscience keepers, says Maulana Wahiduddin Khan

Winning and losing are a common phenomenon in politics. During the era of kings, the equation was clearly that of winners and losers. But now we are living in an age of democracy and a paradigm shift has taken place. Now the real equation is a win-win equation. No one is a loser; both sides are winners.

Democracy has totally changed the concept of victory and defeat. Earlier, there used to be a genuine change in the seat of government, but now elections mean a change of the political team, and that too temporarily. In a democracy, victory is a responsibility and not something to be proud of.

At Your Service

The new team thanks the old team, and the old team promises its support to the new team. In the kingship era, the motto was: ‘I am here to rule the land’, but in a democracy, the motto is different. It is: ‘I am here to serve the land.’ This was India’s 16th general election. We have already travelled 15 milestones in our march towards democracy, and we are now embarking on a new one. Democracy is based on the concept of sharing in politics. In democracy, there are always two benches: the ruling bench and the opposition bench.

The role of the ruling party is to give the country good governance. Governance includes fulfilling of several responsibilities like providing a corrupt-free administration, developing good infrastructure, maintaining high standards of education, boosting the economy and utilising the potential of the country in the best possible manner. The winning team will be judged by its deeds, not by its words.

The role of the opposition is not that of a political rival; rather, it is the role of participation. In this sense, the role of the losing party does not come to an end after elections. Rather, it continues. If, in the previous period, it had played a leading role, now it is destined to perform a supporting role.

The winning party may inherit some problems from its predecessor. But according to healthy democratic values, the new party must take this as a challenge rather than exploit it in order to blame the previous party. This is the time for both winning and losing parties to set high democratic standards. The winning party must not try to take revenge or blame its predecessors; neither should the losing party adopt the attitude of opposition for the sake of opposition. It should not try to stall the process of governance, rather it should offer support for the sake of national development.

M KGandhi was the founding father of India. His vision for a free India was to make India an international lighthouse. I believe that potentially India is a lighthouse for other nations. What is required is to turn this potentiality into an actuality. May God help the new leaders of the country to realise this noble cause!