"In this narrative, poaching of legislators is extolled as smart political management; strategic introduction of money for allurement, tough-minded use of state machinery for intimidation etc are all commended as resourcefulness," he said.
Rawat said that under the new narrative, "the winner can commit no sin" and "a defector crossing over to the ruling camp stands cleansed of all the guilt as also possible criminality."
Underlining that "democracy thrives when elections are free, fair and transparent", he said, "However, it appears to a cynical common man that we have been scripting a narrative that places maximum premium on winning at all costs to the total exclusion of ethical considerations."
His remarks came just days after the political drama in Gujarat during the Rajya Sabha elections. The EC had invalidated votes of two Congress MLAs for violating secrecy norms during voting.
He said although money was necessary for political parties and candidates, experience had shown that there was a "real and present risk" that some parties and candidates, once in office, would be more responsive to the interests of a particular group of donors rather than to wider public interest.
"Policy capture occurs when the interests of a narrow group dominate those of other stakeholders to the benefit of that narrow group," Rawat said.
Rawat said the recent amendments in election and income tax laws make it clear that any donation received by a political party through an electoral bond had been taken out of the ambit of reporting in the Contribution Report which political parties have to submit to the EC.
He said the implications of this step could be retrograde as far as transparency was concerned.
"Furthermore, where contributions received through Electoral Bonds are not reported, a perusal of contribution reports will not make it clear whether the party in question has taken any donations in violation of Section 29B of the Representation of People Act, which prohibits political parties from taking donations from government companies and foreign sources," he added.
Rawat also said that the Election Commission was formulating a social media policy to address the issue of public relations firms being used by parties to shape public opinion online.
"It has come to the notice of the commission that paid operators run by PR firms are being actively deployed to shape public opinion online," he said
"I'm happy to state that the ECI is formulating its social media policy and we are hopeful that it is likely to address such issues," he added.
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