DMK slams BJP for proposing One Nation, One Election

The ruling DMK has come down heavily on the BJP led Centre for proposing “one nation, one election” and said that the saffron party has not understood the purpose of the democratic exercise called elections.

In a scathing editorial published in its party organ ‘Murasoli’, the DMK referred to the recent victory of the BJP in the Gujarat State Assembly polls and said, “Are they going to dissolve it? BJP is in power in many other states. Are they going to dissolve the governments? Will BJP MLAs accept it? How many thousands of crores would be spent on conducting elections in such dissolved states?

Remarking that backdoor is the path known to the BJP, the DMK party organ said that the BJP poaches ruling party MLAs and topples governments when it fails to win in State Assembly elections. “When will elections be conducted for such toppled governments? Will they be conducted along with Parliamentary polls after five years? Who will rule the states till then? Or will they dissolve the Parliament to conduct elections for such states? Will the election expenditure be borne by the rich BJP?” the editorial added.

Stating that even election to Gujarat State Assembly was conducted only in two phases, the DMK said, “In a country where they are unable to conduct election to a State Assembly in one phase, they are planning to conduct election to all State legislatures and the Parliament simultaneously. They do not know why the elections are conducted. It is conducted for the people. Elections are conducted not merely to elect representatives to State Assemblies and the Parliament, but for the people to exercise their democratic right and delegate their representatives through election.”

“Viewing elections as an expenditure instead of a noble exercise in a democracy is a skewed perception. Hence, the DMK strongly opposed one nation, one election proposal, which is impractical and antithetical to the principle of federalism,” the editorial said, citing the views communicated to the national law commission by Chief Minister MK Stalin on the issue.