On India’s troubled relationship with democratic values. (First published in The Baffler.)
Sometime after midnight on June 25, 1975, over six hundred political leaders, social activists, and trade unionists in India were rudely awakened by knocks on their doors. By dawn, they had been placed behind bars for inciting “internal disturbance.” In parallel, the government shut off electricity to newspaper offices, blocking their next day’s editions.
“The President has proclaimed the Emergency,” Prime Minister Indira Gandhi announced in a surprise broadcast the next morning on All India Radio. “This is nothing to panic about.” The previous night, she had made a bleary-eyed President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed trigger the Emergency provision in Article 352 of India’s constitution, which allowed her to postpone elections and suspend most fundamental rights, including those to speech, assembly, association, and movement. With the stroke of a pen, Gandhi had effectively dismantled India’s democratic infrastructure, concentrating dictatorial power in herself. Total press censorship was imposed, and foreign journalists who did not toe the line were summarily expelled, including stringers with the Washington Post, the Guardian, and the Daily Telegraph. On June 28, someone snuck a clever obituary into the Bombay edition of The Times of India: “D’Ocracy—D.E.M., beloved husband of T. Ruth, loving father of L.I. Bertie, brother of Faith, Hope, and Justice, expired on 26th June.”
The twenty-one months of Emergency that followed are regarded as the darkest chapter in independent India’s history. For those old enough to remember, the word recalls mass incarcerations without trial, a gagged press and propaganda, slum demolitions, and—most shockingly—the forced sterilizations of millions. Often cited as a cautionary tale in Indian political discourse, it is generally seen as an “exceptional” period from which India recovered admirably well, thanks in large part to the resilience of its democratic institutions and ethos.
Two new books powerfully challenge this consensus. In India’s First Dictatorship, Christophe Jaffrelot and Pratinav Anil expose the chronic weaknesses in India’s democratic culture prior to the Emergency, revealing the role that other actors—businessmen, the middle class, even trade unionists and some communists—played in enabling Gandhi’s authoritarian rule. In Emergency Chronicles, Gyan Prakash considers how aspects of the modern Indian state, particularly its Constitution, enabled a demagogic takeover. In asking fundamental questions about the relation between state and society in India and exploring its many fault lines, these books cut through the boosterism that generally occludes the “world’s largest democracy.” Rather than viewing the Emergency as an aberration, they present it as a logical outcome of certain social and political tendencies of independent India.
Both books are written with an eye to the present. Since coming to power in 2014, Prime Minster Narendra Modi has presided over a kind of undeclared emergency: rejecting constitutional norms; jailing thousands of peaceful dissidents, journalists, and activists; undermining the press; retracting the last shards of Kashmir’s autonomy. While preserving their democratic veneer, he has weaponized civic institutions including the intelligence agency and police force; the central bank, judiciary, and election commission; and even public universities and the Indian Council of Historical Research. Most strikingly, like Gandhi, Modi has embarked on a series of misguided and needlessly punitive policies—from banning certain currency notes with almost no prior notice to overseeing a militarized Covid-19 lockdown that, lacking planning or preparation, prompted a mass migration on foot. The ease with which he has done this has once again raised questions about what Prakash describes as Indian society’s “troubled relationship with democratic values.” These books allow us to evaluate how today’s gathering liberal-democratic deficits stack up against the mid-1970s. Is India today less, or more, vulnerable to tyranny than it was back then?
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The state of independent India was forged in a crucible of violence. Between 1947 and 1950, the years during which the constitution was drafted, the subcontinent faced the ordeal of Partition, a war over Kashmir, feuds with princely states, and various regional conflicts and discords. These experiences only strengthened the desire that various Indian leaders—Jawaharlal Nehru, other senior Congressmen, and also B.R. Ambedkar—had long harbored for a strong, centralized state that could maintain order and stability and (more nebulously) forge national unity. Luckily for them, the departing imperial government had just such an edifice with vast executive powers, which the nationalist elites took over with few changes. As Prakash points out, “there was no revolutionary overthrow of the old social order, economy, law, police, and bureaucracy.”
The new state preserved much of the spirit and the basic structure of the colonial era judiciary and civil administration. A major difference was that fundamental rights, such as freedom of speech and expression, were added to the constitution. But the state retained the right to make any law to “impose reasonable restrictions” on such rights on vague grounds, including “in the interests of” preserving “public order, decency or morality” and more. An emergency could be imposed merely because of a threat of war or “internal disturbance.” The constitution essentially allowed a crooked leader to legally wreck the democracy it was designed to safeguard.
B.R. Ambedkar—India’s foremost Dalit leader and the chief architect of the constitution—supported some of these provisions. But he did not share the other nationalists’ obsession with a strong motherland, which pushed them to criminalize seditious speech and curtail privacy rights. Growing up in a community deemed “untouchable,” he understood better than any other national leader just how deeply hierarchical and divided “Indian society” was. Democracy in India, he famously said in 1948, was mostly “a top-dressing on an Indian soil which is essentially undemocratic.” The state had to fertilize this soil to make democracy bloom, through vigorous social and economic intervention. “Convinced that Indian society lacked democratic values,” Prakash writes:
Ambedkar placed his faith in the political sphere. There was something Tocquevillian in this belief in the reconstitution of society by politics. Accordingly, he wrote a constitution that equipped the state with extraordinary powers. He and his fellow lawmakers expected that the state would accomplish from above what the society could not from below.
To that end, Ambedkar’s constitution emphasized “equality and fraternity in all spheres of life” and included provisions to safeguard marginalized groups. Over the decades, he has deservingly received much credit for his role in crafting the document. But in the early fifties, he expressed his disappointment with the final product. His vision of a pedagogic state promoting “constitutional morality” required “the leaders’ moral commitment to democratic procedures”, writes Prakash. “It envisioned that the elite would somehow overcome class and caste pressures from society. Here, the record is an abject failure.”
After the departure of the white sahibs, upper-caste elites, like so many post-colonial elites elsewhere, took over as brown sahibs, as Ambedkar feared they would. The halo of the freedom struggle led by Congress nationalists helped Nehru and his party during the fifties. The two pillars of Congress support at the time were rich landlords and big businesses. This oligarchy not only scuttled Nehru’s plans for land reform and nationalization, it easily got away with being corrupt and nepotistic; even Nehru allowed his daughter to become Congress president in 1959. Far from driving a program of socioeconomic justice (as in many East Asian countries)—say, land reform, universal education, fighting caste discrimination—elites consolidated their hegemony over politics, the economy, education, cultural institutions, and the media. India was effectively a democracy of the few, by the few, for the few.
This was the kind of country that Indira Gandhi inherited from her father in 1966. In this period of social ferment, popular movements of various ideological orientations broke out across the country: Maoism erupted in the Bengal countryside, nativists railed against South Indian migrants in Maharashtra, middle-class youth protested assaults on academic freedom and rising prices in Gujarat, and a broad coalition of interests opposed corruption in Bihar. These uprisings are perhaps best seen as the outcome of rising aspiration and political awareness among subaltern and semi-franchised demographics. More and more, Indians now saw themselves as citizens of the state, not its subjects. But the elites that ruled them remained largely callous and apathetic. “Able to mobilize the population against British rule but incapable of accommodating popular demands and aspirations,” reflects Prakash, “the elite was compelled to rule with a heavy dose of coercion.” Already in 1958, the Nehruvian state had enacted the Armed Force Special Powers Act (AFSPA), modeled after a British era ordnance, which gave legal immunity to security forces for atrocities like rape, murder, and torture. Such crimes would later be perpetrated in the north-east, Kashmir, Punjab, and the indigenous belt of central India: all regions, crucially, with Hindu minorities. “The hand of AFSPA has fallen where the reach of Hinduism has stopped,” Perry Anderson notes in his book The Indian Ideology.
During her early years in power, Gandhi cleverly swept away the party’s old guard and centralized control in herself. Touting a version of “democratic socialism,” she nationalized fourteen commercial banks that held 85 percent of all deposits and abolished the “privy purses” of the heirs of former rulers of princely states—they had previously been entitled to receive up to eight percent of all revenues in perpetuity from their territories—both actions the Supreme Court resisted. The Court also thwarted her ambitions of land reform, arguing that property ownership was a fundamental right and that parliament couldn’t seize anyone’s land for redistribution (so much for “Nehruvian socialism”). Angered by this, write Jaffrelot and Anil, Gandhi resolved “to liberate parliament from the vice-like grip of conservative justices,” setting in motion a long battle of wills. She toughened existing regulations and bureaucratized controls over businesses, later called the “license raj,” which further deepened India’s economic stagnation and worsened public corruption.
In 1971, billing herself a messiah of the poor, Gandhi won by a landslide on the populist slogan garibi hatao (“remove poverty”). She was still riding high that December after beating Pakistan in war and securing the liberation of Bangladesh. Her cause was righteous, and she thumbed her nose at the American bullies who, rather than doing the right thing, had supported their Cold War ally Pakistan. In India After Gandhi, Ramachandra Guha reports that “even opposition politicians were now speaking of her as ‘Durga,’ the all-conquering goddess of Hindu mythology.”
But things soon got worse. Two underwhelming monsoons and the 1973 global oil crisis led to droughts, price inflation, recession, high urban unemployment, and rampant corruption—troubles that often formed the backdrop of the arthouse cinema of the day, such as in films by Satyajit Ray and Mrinal Sen, and even an occasional Bollywood film, like Manoj Kumar’s Roti Kapda Aur Makaan (“Food, Clothing and Shelter”). Industrial growth, land redistribution, and poverty reduction stalled, falling even below their previous anemic levels. Nor had the Congress done much to alter the upper-caste domination of power and resources. Strikes, rallies, and protests teemed with sloganeering youth and students, including future regional leaders like Laloo Prasad Yadav and Nitish Kumar. Along with peasants and workers, they hitched a host of frustrations to the rousing call of Sampoorna Kranti (“Total Revolution”) issued by the freedom fighter and Gandhian socialist Jayaprakash Narayan, or JP. They railed against public corruption, official apathy, and state repression. Though national elections were just months away, they demanded Mrs. Gandhi’s resignation. Not since the freedom movement had such large protests been organized. Anand Patwardhan’s documentary Waves of Revolution (1974) offers a moving glimpse of this uprising as it played out in Bihar.
For her part, Gandhi vehemently denounced these agitations. This exposed her “unease with electoral competition, the plurality of interests, and representative politics—the very stuff of democracy,” write Jaffrelot and Anil. It didn’t help that JP himself disliked secularism and collaborated with the Hindu right wing, including the paramilitary Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), rehabilitating these fascists after years of stigma from their association with Mahatma Gandhi’s killer. The feebleness of Mrs. Gandhi’s democratic instincts had met its match in the incoherence of JP’s social vision.
The trigger for the Emergency is widely seen as a judgment made by the Allahabad High Court in 1975. Finding Gandhi guilty of relatively minor electoral misdeeds in 1971, the Court had voided her election to the parliament and barred her from contesting elections for six years. The case went to the Supreme Court, and Gandhi considered resigning until her appeal was resolved. In the end, she decided against taking chances. Instead, she gathered her lackeys in the police and foreign intelligence to plan a covert war on democracy. Dissidents were spied on; lists of target citizens were prepared; propaganda was readied. Then came the midnight raids and the proclamation on national radio.
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Gandhi liked to tell foreign journalists that the Emergency was imposed to prevent the “disruption and collapse” of the country and to inject a “new spirit of discipline and morale.” She alleged that Indians had grown “too lax, too self-centred, too permissive, too indisciplined [sic].” Signs were put up in public spaces declaring: “Courage and Clarity of Vision, Thy Name is Indira Gandhi”; “She Stood between Order and Chaos”; “Talk Less, Work More.”
India’s judiciary is often praised for its independence. But it keeled right over during the Emergency, finding nothing wrong with the suspension of habeas corpus, which paved the way for mass incarceration without trial. Gandhi relished this new power, jailing over 100,000 dissidents: from the left, the right, even ex-Congressmen. Students, journalists, Naxalites, and others were attacked and imprisoned without charges. Most were held in overstuffed, unsanitary jails. Many prisoners were beaten, sexually abused, or tortured: all of which, it should be underlined, is par for the course in Indian jails. Some were punished simply to instill fear. To that end, about 0.19 percent of bureaucrats across the country were selectively fired, which helped bend the “steel frame” of bureaucracy into submission. Arrests, tax raids, and punitive job transfers were used to extract compliance. News outlets were heavily censored—banned from publishing anything critical of the government and required to get approval for any coverage of the Emergency.
Having dispensed with the “anti-nationals”—a word Gandhi unironically introduced in a constitutional amendment—the government got down to the business of “nation-building.” For the technocrats in power, any progress was predicated on curbing population growth—shades of eugenics—and they were frustrated by the slow pace of the state’s “family planning” efforts. Armed now with absolute power and without the watchful eye of the press or the judiciary, the regime launched highly aggressive and coercive sterilization drives. The model of offering money for sterilizations had already been honed in the sixties, guided by agencies like the Ford Foundation and World Bank. Official targets were often achieved by coercing Dalits, Muslims, and the poor, and this continued after the Emergency.
The punitive nature of this project deserves underscoring. Rather than investing in human development—educating girl students, combating infant mortality (so people would have fewer babies)—Gandhi intensified state repression against the marginalized. States were given sharply higher sterilization targets, placing intense pressure and threats on officials to lure people to the knife. In cities, the police picked up beggars, the homeless, day laborers, and the infirm for nasbandi (vasectomy), including a few unmarried young men. Some villagers dared to resist collectively, such as the Muslim Meos in villages south of Gurgaon, today a satellite city of Delhi. Their electricity was cut off for twenty-five days, after which hundreds of policemen arrived with guns and tear gas to forcibly round up men for the surgery. Across the country, resistance was met with violent reprisal; the police shot hundreds dead. This had become less family planning and more manhunt.
Gandhi remained evasive about these killings and saw them as collateral damage. The omelet of progress, she held, sometimes required breaking the eggs of individual rights. “We should not hesitate to take steps which might be described as drastic,” she told a group of physicians. “Some personal rights have to be kept in abeyance, for the human rights of the nation, the right to live, the right to progress.” Because officials were incentivized to produce numbers, not quality, sterilizations were often done hastily in unsanitary camps; many suffered injuries, a few died. (Rohinton Mistry would later depict such events in his 1995 novel, A Fine Balance.) In regions hit by drought, aid to the poor was linked to getting sterilized. Bihar even restricted ration cards to the first three children in each family and fired family planning officials who missed their sterilization targets by 50 percent. During the Emergency, nearly eleven million people were sterilized, at a rate about five or six times higher than in preceding years.
While neutering the unwashed masses, the technocrats also went after their dwellings. Under the guise of “beautification,” writes Prakash, they now sent in bulldozers to raze urban slums. Residents “were offered plots in resettlement colonies often on the condition of producing sterilization certificates.” Over 150,000 illegal demolitions were carried out in dozens of cities. Some of the worst demolitions targeted the largely Muslim localities of Old Delhi, where “the resistance was brutally suppressed with bullets and wanton violence.” Many of the newly homeless were simply dumped outside the city with no sign of the housing promised them. Over 700,000, or fourteen percent of Delhi’s residents, were displaced by “beautification” drives; 20,000 street dogs were killed. Gandhi’s goal of garibi hatao had effectively devolved into garib hatao (“remove the poor”).
Both sterilizations and slum demolitions were led by Indira’s son Sanjay: the ruthless, unscrupulous “man of action.” In some ways he anticipated the shifts India would later make. As Jaffrelot and Anil write, Sanjay held that “the economy was better handled by the private sector, socialism was passé, tax cuts were necessary.” Almost entirely due to his own total incompetence, he had failed in building a home-grown “people’s car,” a pet project that public-sector banks were arm-twisted into supporting. But undeterred by this, he now sought his métier in politics. Though Sanjay held no position in government, his mother let him speak for her and command party officials and senior bureaucrats.
Like her father, Gandhi is often deemed a socialist. Yet she made taxation more regressive during the Emergency. She also gave wealth and income tax breaks to the top one percent, offset by cuts in social welfare and education. (Indeed, like her nationalist predecessors, she disdained mass education and had the gall to call on “voluntary organizations” to educate fellow Indians, 65 percent of whom were illiterate at the time.) She did a bit more land redistribution than in previous years but showed little interest in making these changes unchallengeable in the courts. Her regime, write Jaffrelot and Anil, mostly combined “corporatism and authoritarianism,” thwarted labor movements and trade unionism, and favored “private sector monopolies.” A member of parliament wondered “if this is really a swing to the left or whether it is not, in fact, a swing to the right?”
In effect, Gandhi ran a big-business-friendly autocracy. Perhaps that is why her Emergency was backed by most industrialists, including JRD Tata who held that parliamentary democracy was not suitable for India. Heads of leading universities even colluded with the state to punish dissenting students. Gandhi also had the support of certain intellectuals and a large section of the middle class, which saw her as restoring law and order and social discipline. Their democratic spirit and commitment to the values of liberty, equality, and fraternity were evidently much weaker than their deep-rooted sense of hierarchy and respect for authority. (It no doubt helped that Gandhi also lowered duties on middle-class consumer goods.) Crucially, the state bureaucracy played a pivotal role as the vanguard of her repressive regime. A cartoonist called it “the dictatorship of the Secretariat.”
Democracy, write Jaffrelot and Anil, “fell apart so quickly in India in 1975 because its core values, including liberty, were poorly institutionalized in the Indian setting.” Constitutional morality was a theoretical idea to most people, especially in villages, where lives were governed by older social codes. The Emergency was only an intensification of the violence that most citizens, especially the poor, had long suffered from the state and society. Deep down, many still accorded their “pedigreed” leaders the sort of feudal reverence that monarchs had once enjoyed. If anything, they tended to blame state officials for the excesses—not Gandhi or her son, who remained popular afterwards—revealing a sizable preference for charismatic authoritarian leaders that continues today.
By late 1976, Western media had grown largely critical of Gandhi’s regime. At home, popular anger against sterilizations and slum demolitions had intensified. Denounced by close friends, Gandhi faced growing protests from writers and intellectuals, some returning their state awards. Eventually, even Gandhi realized that her son had gone too far and wanted to rein him in. She had always said that the Emergency was temporary, and she once again craved popular legitimacy and international esteem. In January of the next year, she abruptly released all political prisoners and called for new elections in March. But surrounded by lackeys, she had misjudged her odds of winning. The public handed her a ringing defeat.
The new regime led by the Janata Party—an unlikely, rag-tag coalition of left and right parties united mainly by the goal of defeating Gandhi and reversing her constitutional mayhem—undid most of Gandhi’s excesses and made it harder to declare an emergency. But the coalition soon bungled the economy, produced social turmoil, and fell apart from infighting, paving the way for Gandhi’s return. Among the brawling parties was the RSS’s political wing, the right-wing Bharatiya Jana Sangh, which split from the Janata Party in 1980 and emerged rebranded as the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) that rules India today.
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The meteoric rise of the BJP is the culmination of a century-long mobilization that championed a different idea of the Indian nation, organized around a narrow Hindu identity rather than civic belonging. By its very nature, Hindu nationalism, or Hindutva, is chauvinistic and hegemonic. The BJP might control the Indian state, but it governs a Hindu nation.
Like Indira Gandhi, Modi has huge middle-class support, especially among upper-caste Hindus, 61 percent of whom voted for him in 2019, constituting his most reliable vote bank. But where Gandhi was merely an admired authoritarian leader, Modi’s appeal transcends politics. An RSS man, he shares the cultural insecurities and manufactured sectarian resentments of the Hindu middle class. A master of dog whistles, he feeds them Hindu pride, visions of a glorious past, fantasies of superpower-dom complete with bullet trains, smart cities, and a muscular nation for the Hindus—the Hindu Rashtra. This leader of the largest democracy rarely talks to the press, preferring to sermonize like a sage, weaving in homilies and legendary tales. In an era of disorienting social change, he speaks of reviving traditional culture and knowledge like yoga, Ayurveda, Sanskrit, and Brahminical scriptures. As globalization brings us ever closer, he exalts patriotism and personal sacrifice for the deity of the nation, or Bharat Mata.
If Gandhi represented a bourgeois populism shading into economic leftism, Modi represents a bourgeois populism shading into cultural fascism. A party of cadres, the BJP belongs to a family of paramilitary, social, and cultural organizations, “the Sangh Parivar.” Together, they penetrate social life far more extensively than the Congress ever did or could. “In the absence of party cadres,” write Jaffrelot and Anil, “the Congress leadership lacked the ability of totalitarian regimes to diffuse ideas and implement policies.” The reach of the Hindu right’s propaganda machine, deploying both electronic media and grassroots social services, is unprecedented. BJP’s hopelessly divided opposition has little to counter it. As a result, a growing proportion of Hindus have come to believe that their way of life is threatened by India’s “non-Dharmic” religious minorities, especially Muslims—most of whom belong to the weakest socioeconomic groups in the country—and from leftist students and intellectuals, poets, journalists, social activists, and other dissenters deemed “anti-nationals.” Hindutva is so intoxicating that its acolytes can even overlook Modi’s gravest blunders, such as demonetization, a multi-year decline in economic growth, an internal mass-migration due to an ill-planned Covid-19 lockdown, and worsening relations with India’s neighbors. In fact, since 2014, India has steadily declined on the global indices of hunger, happiness, press freedom, economic freedom, and economic competitiveness.
Indira Gandhi’s excesses were driven from the top and implemented by state officials. In Modi’s case, the work of the partisan state is amplified by armies of reactionary foot soldiers that Gandhi never had: vigilantes in the form of lynch mobs; cow protectors; communal thugs; social media hecklers, paid trolls and fake news spreaders; cow-piss medics; fraud gurus; and harassers of inter-faith couples. BJP administrations, as in India’s most populous state Uttar Pradesh, tolerate and even encourage vigilante justice. The party and these fervent devotees often work as if in a two-pincer movement. The right-wing corporate media treats them indulgently, stumps for Modi, and raises support for majoritarian rule—in exchange for governmental and political ad spending, offline benefits, or simply out of their own ideological fervor.
Alongside this, the BJP has made political funding less transparent and has invested heavily in fake news factories, led by the BJP IT Cell. “We can make any message go viral, whether real or fake, sweet or sour,” boasted India’s home minister Amit Shah at a gathering of the party’s social media volunteers. The police, too, have become a partisan tool in the BJP’s arsenal, as evident in the communal attack in February 2020 that targeted Muslims in India’s capital. The government has increasingly weaponized telecom and Internet blackouts. Media houses trying to do real journalism face violence, malicious investigations, income tax raids, and outright shutdowns. Watchdog agencies like Greenpeace and Amnesty International have been harassed into suspending most or all of their operations in India. The regime’s dominance over the judiciary is plainly evident in the Supreme Court’s growing reluctance to challenge the ideological projects of the BJP, whether in Kashmir, Ayodhya, or the Citizenship Amendment Act that created a pathway to Indian citizenship based on religion. The Court has also turned a blind eye to the Modi regime’s rampant misuse of preventive detention laws—such as the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, National Security Act, and the old sedition law—to arrest citizens.
It is true that other than in Kashmir, basic liberties and democratic institutions are not yet as far gone as they were during the Emergency. But the nature of the collapse today feels a lot more sordid and ominous. Fear now pervades the shrinking pockets of dissenting opinion and debate; it really feels like the onset of fascism. Indira Gandhi always said that the Emergency was temporary, but the BJP’s vision is for the ages.
Fortunately, there is resistance too, led by citizens who understand the stakes and are willing to fight for their idea of India, as during the largely peaceful countrywide protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act in December last year (the state responded by killing 25 people and jailing thousands). Add to this the recent protests by farmers against the neo-liberalization of agriculture and by a wider public against the atrocious state response to the gang-rape and murder of a Dalit girl by upper-caste thugs in Hathras, Uttar Pradesh. Will the resistance prove adequate? The constitution needs defending for sure, but what’s also needed is a sober decency in public life, a sense of common humanity, and respect for facts, evidence, and critical thinking. “However good a constitution may be,” Ambedkar said in his final address to the Constituent Assembly in 1949, “it is sure to turn out bad because those who are called to work it, happen to be a bad lot.” How a constitution works on the ground ultimately depends on “the people and the political parties they . . . set up to carry out their wishes and their politics.” He added pensively: “Who can say how the people of India and their parties will behave?”
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