When Parliament Becomes “Optional,” Democracy Is in Trouble
When Parliament Becomes “Optional,” Democracy Is in Trouble
In a parliamentary democracy, attendance is not optional.
Debate is not decorative. Rebuttal is not a nuisance. They are the core of the
system. When a Prime Minister repeatedly treats Parliament as something to
enter and exit at convenience, especially when the Leader of the Opposition
rises to speak, it is not a minor procedural issue. It reflects a governing
mindset. It tells us how powerful accountability.
For years, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has cultivated an
image of strength. The language of boldness, decisiveness, and personal courage
has been central to his political brand. But bravery in a democracy is not
measured by chest-thumping rhetoric or carefully managed public appearances. It
is measured by the willingness to sit in Parliament, listen to criticism, and
respond without deflection.
Here is the uncomfortable comparison. On one hand, we are
told this is a fearless leader, a man of resolve who does not back down. On the
other hand, when Rahul Gandhi raises serious policy criticism as Leader of the
Opposition, the Prime Minister’s seat is often empty. If courage defines
leadership, then courage must include the stamina to endure dissent.
The second issue is competence. Over the years, several
public statements made by the Prime Minister have been widely criticized as
scientifically or factually questionable. In a democracy, mistakes can happen.
What matters is whether a leader subjects himself to rigorous questioning
afterward. Avoiding Parliament during critical debate only sharpens the
perception that scrutiny is being sidestepped.
So the contrast becomes stark: a narrative of bravery
alongside a pattern of avoidance. A projection of strength paired with
reluctance to defend decisions in the House. This is not just about optics. It
is about institutional culture. When the head of government signals that
parliamentary engagement is conditional, it lowers the standard for the entire
political ecosystem. Ministers follow. Party leaders mirror the tone. Public
discourse shifts from argument to accusation. Criticism becomes
“anti-national.” Questions become “attacks.” And slowly, accountability is
reframed as hostility.
That is how democracies erode, not through a single dramatic
collapse, but through the normalization of diminished expectations. This
pattern is not unique to India. Around the world, we have seen leaders who
built powerful images of strength while hollowing out institutional norms. In
the United States, Donald Trump reshaped the Republican Party through
confrontational politics that often treated oversight as personal warfare. In
other nations, leaders have consolidated authority by weakening courts,
intimidating media, and dismissing opposition voices as enemies of the state.
The script is familiar: project strength, attack critics,
bypass institutions, and reframe accountability as sabotage. What makes it
embarrassing is not only the behavior of one leader. It is the applause. Supporters
who cheer this style of governance must ask themselves a difficult question: If
the Prime Minister of the world’s largest democracy cannot sit through a rebuttal
from the Leader of the Opposition, what exactly are we defending? If criticism
is treated as an insult, what does that say about our confidence as a nation?
Leadership sets the tone. When tone becomes dismissive of
institutions, the damage spreads. The global perception of India is shaped not
just by economic growth or military posture, but by how seriously its leaders
treat democratic norms.
This is not about liking or disliking a political party. It
is about standards. If you believe in strength, demand that strength be shown
in Parliament. If you believe in intellect, demand intellectual seriousness in
public statements. If you believe in democracy, demand respect for its
processes. Otherwise, we are not defending the nation. We are defending the ego.
And that is not bravery. It is insecurity dressed as power.
When a minister from the ruling party spreads falsehoods that provoke unstable individuals into threatening opposition leaders, accountability cannot stop at the person making the threat. The minister who deliberately fuels that hostility must also face consequences. Incitement from positions of power is not free speech. It is an abuse of authority. And when misinformation leads to threats or violence, those who trigger it should be held legally responsible and arrested along with the individual making such threats.
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