By Rajinder Puri / Delhi
The Election Commission (EC) has sought an explanation from BJP Deputy Leader in Lok Sabha Gopinath Munde about his poll expenses after he had publicly stated that he had spent far in excess of the legally permitted amount in the last election. Munde dared the EC and said that he was prepared to be unseated from parliament for speaking the truth. Munde however has not responded to the EC notice by promptly confirming his remarks but by instructing his lawyer to give a response. Possibly he may find legal arguments for his defence.
Meanwhile his party colleagues have praised Munde for speaking the truth about the sordid reality of poll expenditure incurred by all candidates. They congratulate him for daring to speak the truth in order to introduce electoral reform.
Munde’s daughter has likewise praised her father for honestly admitting what all other politicians practice but do not preach. Both the BJP and Munde’s daughter are correct in asserting that the gap between what is spent by most poll candidates and what they submit as poll expenditure is vast. But that raises a fundamental question.
What precisely is considered acceptable moral conduct by Indian society?
After all by the assertions of the BJP leaders and Munde’s daughter most candidates lie when they file their poll expenditure returns. Do they have no qualms when they do that? Because lying for the sake of quick gain and expediency is a universal habit in India, has it become part of our accepted moral code? Is that why when Prime Minister Manmohan Singh first entered parliament’s Rajya Sabha by submitting a patently false sworn affidavit that he was a permanent resident of Assam it failed to elicit any serious criticism?
When Indians bemoan the state of governance and the spread of corruption in our system they need to very seriously ponder on this question. If speaking a falsehood for the sake of expedient gain is considered to be acceptable conduct in our moral code it is difficult to see how there can ever be effective governance in any field of activity.
For a national appraisal of this aspect it would be most appropriate for the RSS to initiate a serious debate. After all, Munde has been a lifelong member of the RSS. And the avowed aim of the RSS is to build character among its followers. Is speaking the truth at all times relevant to good character? Perhaps RSS leaders might ponder this question and enlighten us with their conclusions.
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