Monday, April 14, 2008

All Party Government, Prachanda President, Chitralekha Speaker


Looks like the Maoists will win a simple majority in the polls, the NC will emerge the second largest party in the country, and the MJF might emerge the largest party in the Madhesh. But this is to be an assembly to write a constitution for which you need a two thirds majority to write any article to the constitution. And that is why an all party government would be a good idea. You need a coalition culture in the government so you can have a coalition atmosphere also inside the assembly so the work on the constitution is largely smooth.

A Case For Prachanda
  1. Simple arithmetic. The people have spoken. His party has a simple majority in the assembly.
  2. He has always been a republican.
  3. He is best positioned to bring about security sector reform which is much needed. He should give Nepal an army that is perhaps 20,000 strong at most.
A Case For Chitralekha
  1. Simple arithmetic. Largest party gets presidency, second largest gets speakership.
  2. She was the speaker of the House after the royal coup.
  3. She represents many under-represented groups: Madhesi, Mahila, backward caste.
The Case For An All Party Government
  1. After the parliamentary elections under the gambit of a new constitution, a party or a coalition will only need a simple majority, but this is different, this is not a regular parliament. This is a constituent assembly.
  2. An all party government will make it easy to garner the two thirds majority needed to write the articles of the next constitution.
But we have to first wait for the final results to come out. We have to get the final picture first. This is one likely scenario.

Maoists 50%
NC 20%
UML 17%
MJF 10%
TMDP 2%
Others 1%

The Maoists will want to get to keep the plum portfolios like Home, Defense, Foreign, Finance. But the NC, UML, MJF, TMDP, NWPP, SP, JM all have to be invited into the government. A few of them like the UML and the NWPP might choose to stay away, and that is okay, but they have to be invited nevertheless so there is goodwill among the parties.

How to divide the cabinet portfolios? 50-50 might be fair. Half the cabinet is Maoists, half is rest. Or it might be 40-60 if the UML chooses to stay away.

In The News

Nepal’s Maoists make the world sit up Chandigarh Tribune, India The stunning election victory of Nepal’s Maoists has caught India and much of the world unawares. Neither New Delhi nor the international community had reckoned with the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) turning out to be so adept at winning the battle of the ballot. That is not surprising, for few in Nepal, including the Maoist party itself, had foreseen such a development. ..... jettison their pre-election assumptions, revise their policy premises and prepare to engage with the new reality: that the Maoists are in command of Nepal. ..... a unique democratic accomplishment, a Maoist revolution through the ballot box, accomplished in a remarkably short time, with a rebel organisation reinventing itself to emerge at the helm of parliamentary politics. It is a first in South Asia and, perhaps, a global landmark. ..... Nepal is in the throes of a tectonic political shift. .... nothing can now stop the Maoist chief Pushpa Kamal Dahal, alias Prachanda, from becoming Nepal’s first executive president .... he has said Kathmandu would maintain equidistance between India and China.
Nepal's Maoists in stunning polls lead Radio Australia, Australia many analysts, who had expected the former rebels to emerge as the third largest party. .... many regarded more well-established parties as "stale". ..... The Maoist leaders have pledged to cooperate with other parties, and have also said they want to maintain good relations with neighbouring India and China.
Nepal polls: King 'satisfied' over people's participation Times of India, India
Maoist victory march continues in Nepal
Sify, India

UML to withdraw from government NepalNews "The election results have shown that we lost our popularity. The people's mandate is against our expectations and there is no point in staying in the government"

Maoists, PM discuss govt formation Himalayan Times CPN-Maoist inching towards a comfortable majority .... forming a post-election coalition government. .... to be led by the CPN-Maoist.
Stung by defeat, NC starts introspection the question haunting Sujata Koirala .... “We were expecting a minor setback, but not this stunning defeat,” she said. .... “The people are demanding change of leadership in all parties, except that of the Maoists” ...... the NC should metamorphose into an organisation-oriented party injecting youth energy into the NC ..... “There is a danger that they might misuse their organisational and governmental strength to bully other parties.”
Re-polling Needed in 98 Centres, Says EC 21 constituencies in 12 districts ..... Saptari-1, Sarlahi-5 and Chitwan-5 on April 15. In Mahottari, Arghakhachi-1 and 2, it will be held on April 16. And on April 17, there will be repolling in Siraha, Sarlahi-5 and Dailekh 1.
Nepal steps down as UML general secretary my moral responsibility for the party’s unexpected defeat in the polls ..... he would remain as a standing committee member ..... The meet decided to call back all UML ministers in the government, citing that it would be “inappropriate” to remain in the government when the people’s mandate went against the party.

Maoists headed for landslide victory; NC, UML sinking NepalNews 89 seats of the total 163 ...... The Madhesi Janadhikar Forum (MJF) has emerged as a strong force in Terai region. It has won 14 seats. Terai Madhes Loktantrik Party (TMLP) has bagged 4 seats.
Prachanda meets Koirala discussed how the collaboration of the ruling parties could be kept intact until the nation gets a new constitution.
Deuba and Dr. Mahat win Dr. Ram Sharan Mahat won the Nuwakot-2 constituency by bagging 17442 votes. .... Sher Bahadur Deuba won the Dadeldhura constituency by garnering over twenty-thousand votes.








Sunday, April 13, 2008

Madhesi Movement: Next Moves


पाँच बुँदा, पाँच चुनाव

The 1991 elections saw a Nepali Congress wave. The 2008 elections have seen a Maoist wave. The next wave in the country has to be a Madhesi wave. The Madhesi Movement is far from over.

What to do next?

Step one, consolidate. The three Madhesi parties must stick together as a Madhesi Alliance inside the assembly. They should engage in collective bargaining and get into power collectively. The largest party leads naturally. Upendra Yadav has established himself as the Madhesi leader. Once in power, they should also help mainstream the armed Madhesi groups by engaging in respectful dialogue with them.

Step two, Ek Madhesh, Ek Pradesh. All Terai districts should be put together to form a Terai state in a federal Nepal. Ensuring that is the number one task of the Madhesi Alliance. Also, the three Madhesi parties need to get behind the idea of a directly elected executive presidency for the country. The TMDP and the Sadbhavana are lagging behind on this one. The country needs this for rapid economic growth. Also, turn Nepal into a multi-party democracy of state funded parties. That will make it the number one democracy on the planet.

Step three, census and citizenship. Both these must be taken care of before the next parliamentary elections.

Step four, an electoral pre-poll alliance for the next parliamentary elections based on a formula from the 2008 results. Where one of the three parties won, the other two do not contest. Where none of the three won but one was placed second, the party that got the largest number of votes from among the three gets to contest. Where none of the three parties were either first or second, you compromise. You discuss and decide. It might end up looking a 10:3:1 ratio for the MJF, TMDP, and the Sadbhavana. Goal: the next chief executive of the country after Prachanda has to be Upendra Yadav.

Step five, reaching out to the Dalit, Mahila, Janajati and Pahadi in the Terai. If the three Madhesi parties do not reach out to these groups, they will not grow big enough to hold near total sway in the Terai. But if they reach out, therein will lie the germ of their possible growth in the future also in the hills some day a few election cycles down the line. If the Pahadi parties can be present in the Madhesh, why can't Madhesi led parties hope to expand into the hills and the mountains?

Step six, after turning Nepal into a federal republic of state funded parties, (Proposed Constitution) focus on rapid economic growth like a laser beam. (Mantra: Economic Revolution)

Upendra Yadav Was In Town
Upendra Yadav: Five Hours Of Video
Nobel Peace Prize 2008: Making A Case For Nepal



In The News

Maoists lead with 67 seats; NC wins 21, UML 19, MPRF 10, TMDP 3, NWPP 2, NSP-M 1, PFN 1 Kantipur Madhesi People’s rights Forum (MPRF) candidates Upendra Yadav (Sunsari-5), Om Prakash Yadav (Rupandehi-2), Sarb Dev Prasad Oja (Banke-3), Abhishek Pratap Sah (Kapilvastu-5), Karina Begaam (Parsa-1) and Bijaya Kumar Gachhedar (Morang-7) have won the election. ...... Terai Madhes Democratic Party (TMDP) candidates Brijesh Kumar Gupta (Kapilvastu-3), Hirdayesh Tripathi (Nawalparasi-6) and Dan B Kurmi (Kapilvastu-2) have been elected
Maoists lead with 27 seats; NC win 7, UML 6, NWPP 2, MPRF 1 (8:00)

114 seats declared; Maoists bag 63 seats; UML, NC competing for second place NepalNews Nepali Congress and CPN-UML have pocketed 19 seats and 18 seats respectively and are competing for second place. ..... The Madhesi Janadhikar Forum (MJF) has won in nine seats so far with party chairman Yadav Yadav winning from both Sunsari-5 and Morang-5. ..... Terai Madhes Loktantrik Party (TMLP) has bagged two seats while Sadbhawana Party and People's Front (PF) have bagged one seat each.
Prachanda meets Koirala PM Koirala congratulated Prachanda on the success of his party ..... Prachanda on his part appreciated Koirala's role in conducting the polls successfully. ..... leaving Nepali Congress and CPN, the two major partners of the ruling coalition, far behind
India says it is ready work with Maoists the US government has not removed the Maoists from its terrorist watch list.
Morally inappropriate to continue in govt, says MK Nepal "The party had expected that it would win enough seats to be in leadership position," he said, expressing surprise over the results. ..... "One election is the not the end of the road. We will come back," he said.
Prachanda wins from Rolpa-2 as well securing 34,230 votes while UML's Shanta Kumar Oli ended up with 6029 votes.
MJF chief ousts PM's daughter from Sunsari-5; takes Morang-5 also Yadav got 23,939 votes while Sujata finished third with 8,885 votes. .... MJF chairman Yadav also won the election from Morang-5, bagging 27,805 votes while his nearest rival Amrit Aryal of Nepali Congress got 10,324 votes.
MJF candidate arrested with weapons in Malangwa of Sarlahi district .... Ashok Kumar Yadav, MJF candidate in Sarlahi constituency-5, was arrested with five of his supporters after they reportedly started creating a ruckus in front of the District Development Committee office where the vote-counting was going on. They were all found to be drunk.
Home Minister Sitaula, too, bites the dust In Nawalparasi-6 constituency, Hridayesh Tripathy of Terai Madhes Loktantrik Party (TMLP) emerged victorious.




Sarlahi
Constituency No. 4
Winner: Rajendra Mahato | Party: Nepal Shadvawana Party | Vote Count: 18608
Closest Opponent: Ram Chandra raya | Party: TMLP | Vote Count: 9161

Sunsari

Constituency No. 5
Winner: Upendra Yadav | Party: MJF | Vote Count: 23939
Closest Opponent: Mohammad mahfuj Ansari | Party: UML | Vote Count: 9005

Morang
Constituency No. 5
Winner: Upendra Yadav | Party: MJF | Vote Count: 27508
Closest Opponent: Amrit Aryal | Party: NC | Vote Count: 10324