Mandate public disclosure

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| What about the candidates themselves, who have been shredded publicly in this fashion? Mr Shekhawat has been as circumspect as Ms Patil in answering the specific charges. Instead, he has sought to regain some of the high ground by promising to reveal his assets, a demand that the Opposition had first made with regard to Ms Patil. But he has not actually done so, nor has he clarified his position on the charge that he misled the Rajasthan Assembly. And since the media has lost interest, there is the usual denouement after serious charges are aired: the accused maintain a studied silence, their cohorts toss up some technicalities, and life goes on as though nothing has happened. |
| There has been some hand-wringing, though, caused by the perception that this has become the dirtiest presidential election till date. That may well be so as a matter of historical fact. But is it necessarily a bad thing? People are complaining that once a candidate has been selected, the prestige of the office alone should be reason enough not to make a fuss about his or her antecedents. If we accept this logic, even Shibu Soren would qualify, as indeed he did for becoming a minister. A better way to look at what has happened is to view it as a long overdue corrective. There cannot and should not be a "boys-will-be-boys" argument when it comes to high office. |
| The solution at this stage of the system's overall development has to be formal disclosure, so that the system catches the problem before it gets left to the media and public opinion. Every presidential (and, for that matter, vice-presidential) candidate should be required formally to declare assets and how they were financed, a record of the cases pending against him/her and close relatives, any past arraignments that are on the records, financial defaults, etc. Even asking for such disclosure will help to keep out dodgy candidates who fear the risk of exposure. If Mr Shekhawat had known in advance that his life-history would be examined with a fine tooth-comb, he may well have decided not to contest. |
First Published: Jul 13 2007 | 12:00 AM IST