When a private company (e.g Enron) becomes contaminated with criminal practices, it is shut down under the law.

I don't agree with Arvind Kejriwal and IAC that our job is to identify one corrupt person after another in each political party, and then get these individuals inquired into by a Lokpal, and then get them removed.

If evidence of systematic criminality is found in any public organisation (e.g. political party, not-for-profit entity, etc.) that entire organisation must be disbanded.

On grounds of systematic corruption, I ask the Election Commission to deregister both Congress and BJP.

These parties have long become the refuge of THUGS AND CRIMINALS. The criminality starts right from the top, in each case.

Why is the Election Commission sitting quietly and watching these parties loot India and break every law of the land (such as limits on electoral spending)?

I believe there is SUFFICIENT evidence that is WIDELY and READILY available, of systematic loot and violation of India's laws by senior members of these parties. Their internal party practices also only reward criminals.

EC has sufficient grounds to deregister these parties.

Let it perform its constitutional mandate and protect India from LOOTERS.


If you found this post useful, then consider subscribing to my blog by email:

Breaking Free of Nehru

Join the Freedom Team of India or become a Freedom Partner.

email
Google
Print Friendly
 

13 Responses to “I call upon India’s Election Commission to deregister Congress and BJP on grounds of SYSTEMATIC criminality”

  1. I call upon #India’s Election Commission to deregister Congress and BJP on grounds of… http://t.co/VBywFfUY

  2. I call upon India’s Election Commission to deregister Congress and BJP on grounds of… http://t.co/CLCYJHA2

  3. I call upon #India’s Election Commission to deregister Congress and BJP on grounds of… http://t.co/VBywFfUY

  4. Kishan says:

    Most political parties in India like SP, BSP, DMK, ADMK, Akali Dal, Jharkhand parties and others are even worse. So, ban all ! Then who will run India ? The IAS & IPS ?
    The only solution seems to build public opinion so that required reforms like political funding, police reforms, administrative reforms, judicial reforms etc are accepted and undertaken by the political class. Many things like the RTI (under pressure of civil society), use of CNG in Delhi to control pollution (under Supreme Court orders) etc were very reluctantly done by the ruling parties.

  5. Sanjeev Sabhlok says:

    Why is the banning of all parties that indulge in SYSTEMATIC corruption an issue? Are you saying that good candidates/ good parties simply won’t rise to replace them?

    Why this fear/despondency?

    Trust in India. We are NOT required to depend for our country’s future on RASCALS. Let the good people rise.

    s

  6. Kishan says:

    Excellent sentiment (let good people arise), but does not seem to be practical at the moment, like the suggestion of banning all parties.

  7. Sanjeev Sabhlok says:

    Sorry, Kishan. Impracticality is only inside your mind. Not inside my mind.

    I’ve been working to ENSURE reform for the past 15 years and I will have it in my lifetime. Don’t be despondent about India. Our youth is SUPER-BRILLIANT. They need leadership and guidance. They’ll deliver the new India.

    So as a first step, pl. join or otherwise support FTI. India WILL not remain in this mess forever. The crunch time is coming. The voter must be given good choices in 2014.

    s

  8. Kishan says:

    Best of luck to you and people like you with missionary zeal. But I suspect that if the political parties like the Congress are following what you are trying to do, they must be laughing inside. They have examples like JP, Meera Sayal to do that.
    I still believe Anna Hazare, Ramdev, Kejriwal and other such men/women are doing what is possible under the circumstances. Remember, Anna does not agree with Kejriwal’s idea of floating a political party and rightly so, in my view.

  9. Sanjeev Sabhlok says:

    I have no zeal. Just a clear vision. If you don’t get that vision, you’ll be unable to see what I see, so you’ll continue with mindless babble of the sort you’ve just produced.

    You, young man, bear the name of Kishan but do him great injustice.

    You can’t see what I see, and you refuse to do what you should. In this act of cowardice you flee the battlfield and hand it over to criminals.

    Then you take the name of Kishan. Please go change your name first, before talking to me further.

    What “circumstances”? Pah!

    YOU make the circumstances, young man. Don’t you know that?

    s

  10. Kishan says:

    Sir, don’t get angry. I am only talking about the practicality of your thoughts.
    My name was given to me by my parents 67 years back. I will not like to change it now. And I would have joined your mission, even if it is impractical, if I was 20 years younger. I have that in my genes. My father left his government job and joined the Sangh because he believed in certain values, as I do, and he suffered for this practically all his life. I also left a CPWD class-I job and joined a private company, because I thought that I could not fit in a place where the primary consideration in any decision was how much money could be privately made.

  11. Sanjeev Sabhlok says:

    Well, so you are a young man at heart, at least: “I would have joined your mission, even if it is impractical, if I was 20 years younger. I have that in my genes.”

    No, I’m not angry. I’m just provocative. Who knows some young man might actually start thinking that he too can be a leader.

    I’m glad you agree that you and I are not slaves of circumstances. We can shape them. We can make them. If we don’t do that the circumstances will shape us.

    So please let’s motivate young Indians to start thinking seriously, and join FTI to prepare to lead India. Join me in working towards a dramatically better India.

    s

  12. Sir, I have to corner myself with the opinion given by Kishan ji. I wonder how it will be a solution by deregistering. Let us assume that a party is deregistered. What if he contests with a new brand name? I also wonder whether a common man is honest in what he does? Corruption starts from the individual, the individual has to change to bring changes.

  13. Sanjeev Sabhlok says:

    Let’s do one thing at a time. We can’t worry that if Enron is shut down then the directors will start a new company. First step is to shut it down. When the tainted directors try to start a new company, the public will know and not purchase shares. Similarly when a tainted ex-member of Congress/BJP tries to contest elections under a new banner, the people will refuse to vote.

Leave a Reply

Notify me of followup comments via e-mail. You can also subscribe without commenting.



p-4j9aGt2RSyXeB