At one level all this is for the good, since it brings ethical issues to the centre-stage of public discourse. But Godmen and gurus can also walk the edge of fascist thinking — believe in me, listen to me and you are okay; disagree with me and you are condemned to go to hell! How can practical politicians deal with such personalities? Clearly, one escape route is populism. Can a Baba Ramdev bring the likes of a Mamata Banerjee to heel in Kolkata this week? Unlikely. But he has been able to get urbane ministers like Kapil Sibal running to him. Should Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Congress President Sonia Gandhi unleash the weapon of populism against these populist adversaries? Can they? The days when an Indira Gandhi could use populism to fight the likes of a Gandhian such as Jayaprakash Narayan are long gone. Nor can any government today use the threat of war or external aggression to unite the people behind it against domestic opponents. So a gentleman PM like Dr Singh has no option but to try and reason with the Swamis, the Annas and the Babas. Will they listen to reason? Perhaps, if left to themselves. After all, these are all people rooted in India’s consensual tradition. However, if they get manipulated by the social activists and closet anarchists they can spin public discourse out of control. Managing a Baba Ramdev is tricky business, but a necessary one in a country like India. Maybe that explains the government’s gingerly approach.
In the medium- to long-term, however, normal politics must re-assert itself. New movements like Jayaprakash Narayan’s Lok Satta are emerging across the country that take a more constructive view of social activism. Bad politics cannot be replaced by ‘no politics’, say these activists, but should be replaced by ‘good politics’. In other words, don’t subvert democracy, join in and change it. Will the Swamis, the Annas andthe Babas contest elections and test their popularity? Should they? Or, is it best that they function as sentinels, keeping elected politicians in check and on the straight and narrow, but not disempowering them altogether?