This post is part of the CRI’s 1st year anniversary celebrations. We have launched a blogging festival where every member of the CRI Commentariat will participate and write on issues that affect their political outlook. Podcasts with Conservative intellectuals are also coming up, so stay tuned
In a parliamentary democracy, one major advantage that the ruling party enjoys is its ability to pass off innovative bureaucratic interventions and government institutional policy formulation as its own despite the fact that it might not be even remotely linked to party’s core ideological principles. Additionally, they can leverage the visionary policy making of previous ruling dispensations and accrue to itself all the political capital that comes out of it. Given this undeniable reality, political formations operating in the opposition space in parliamentary democracies are left with no choice but to invest necessary capacity building to come up with alternative policy formulations that differentiate themselves from the ruling party in clear and cohesive manner. This can be done only if political formations have the necessary wherewithal and mechanism to conduct long-term policy development. In the case of the BJP, they need to address a widespread perception that the party, which was in the forefront of setting the agenda by its creative formulations in the 90’s, has atrophied to a considerable extent in coming up with a path breaking formulation. The party needs to evolve a model that is a judicious mix of the agitational and the aspirational in keeping pace with the varied demands of political discourse today
As part of an effort to achieve policy renewal, we suggest that the BJP adopts a two pronged approach to plug the lacuna in information and research. Whilst a ‘Vision Group’ can be entrusted with the onerous job of envisaging a longer term blueprinting of organizational objectives, the Research Department that is being proposed here will work on meeting the day to day demands for information and research. This will also insulate the Vision Group from the rigmarole of addressing any transactional policy issue and focus essentially on macro-normative issues.
Given the ever-changing electoral landscape as a result of social churning, demographic shifts and constituency delimitation, the BJP today is required to perform political analysis and research based on systematic data collection and interpretation in addition to intuitive native political wisdom that should be widely available in any party organization. Deployment of sophisticated statistical modeling tools will go some distance in building an element of predictability in political analysis.
In order to engender policy renewal and perform focused data oriented political research, the BJP can attempt to set up a new department on the lines of the Conservative Research Department in the United Kingdom. In terms of its structure and role, this new department can work under the auspices of Party President’s office. In the mature political democracies that this writer uses as benchmarks, it appears that such policy cells have a big role to play in the party apparatus.
Conservative Research Department
The BJP can benefit immensely by learning lessons on how party organizations that operate in mature western democracies have evolved inner party mechanisms to meet the ever expanding challenges of information and research. The Conservative Party was facing a predicament similar to BJP as a consequence of continuous electoral defeats. It was seen as the proverbial nasty party without any meaningful alternative agenda to offer .This led to strengthening of its in-house Conservative Research department which has done a sterling job in steering the course of the party’s policy making.
“The Conservative Research Department was an organization founded by the British Conservative Party to develop party policy and to support the party leadership in promoting their policies and opposing those of rival parties. After the war, the Conservative Party engaged in a profound rethink of its policies following its severe election defeat. Rab Butler was appointed as Chairman of the CRD, and assembled a much larger and highly skilled team which produced The Right Road for Britain (1949) which reshaped party policy and was the basis for the Conservative governments of the 1950s. Its extended post-war role included the provision of extensive briefing material on major legislation before Parliament and all the main issues of political controversy as they arose, as well as to create the post-war Conservatism embodied in the famous series of charters of the late-1940s.
In the 1970s under Margaret Thatcher, CRD was a vital link between a reforming administration and the Party on whose support it depended. It was entrusted with the production of her general election manifestos and worked closely with her during election campaigns.
The CRD today is widely acknowledged as a training ground for leading Conservative politicians.” (Via–Wikipedia)
Functions of the proposed department
The proposed research department can be vested with 5 primary functions
A) Policy Convergence
B) Best Practices Aggregation
C) Issue Management
D) Legislative Research Assistance
E) Political planning & election management/analysis
A) Policy Convergence
The BJP should compile a list of policy experts/thinkers/ideologues and the party should seek to engage them on a continuous basis. Given the hostile intellectual environment that it encounters, it would be difficult for the party to convince some top policy analyst to engage with it. But good intentions and persuasion coupled with determination to find a common ground can help.
B) Best Practices Aggregation
The party should realize the imperative for a Central locus that serves to aggregate the best practices by BJP governments/NDA policy interventions. NDA ruled state governments, urban municipal bodies and rural local bodies have to their credit many path breaking and innovative policies, practices and programmes. However the party does not appears to have a centralized mechanism which aggregates these best-in-class policies, practices and programs in order to facilitate further knowledge sharing across states. This would go a long way in preventing time and effort expended in “reinventing the wheel” as far as policy formulation goes. If replication of best practices is achieved across NDA ruled states, it would provide a credible case for seeking electorate mandate for nationwide implementation. It would also provide an opportunity to standardize consistent and cohesive communication strategy for effective dissemination of NDA success stories
Best Practice briefing repository will be a good idea in this direction – summaries of selected practices from NDA government designed to provide an overview of how various levels of governments are solving critical social, economic and environmental problems. These briefs, will illustrate how BJP vision 2025 will be translated in to implementable actions
The best practices briefs can be organized under the following thematic areas:
To start off with best in class practises would have to be identified, collected, organised in a meaningful structure. This can eventually evolve in to one stop shop which will deliver performance benchmarks and best practice research findings on key areas of governance from NDA ruled states, urban bodies and rural local bodies. The party can also expand the horizon of our initiatives by looking at good governance practices at a global level.
C) Issue Management
D) Legislative Research Assistance
This function can be potentially outsourced
E) Electoral data management/analysis
Conclusion
Leveraging good organisational design principles, building a sound infrastructural backbone, learning lessons from best practises on policy formulation and research, an innovative media strategy with social media as the lynchpin in tandem with conventional political strategies including ground level political mobilisation, restrained and meaningful parliamentary behaviour, networking effectively with ideologically affliated social organisations should be party’s preferred route to reganing preminence.
(This idea was developed in a series of conversationsCRI team hadwith Arun Narendranath, a cerebral young political researcher. He deserves complete credit for providing a structure to these thoughts)