The quarrels and negotiations of everyday politics have been increasingly challenging the Constitutional rules which stand to destabilise any union between the states and the Centre. Rather, the recent rulings of the Central government have deepened the divide between the Centre and the State, while the Opposition even struggles to see any union among each other.
Despite being described as a ‘Unity in Diversity’, India has witnessed a growing obsession with ‘oneness’ of everything --- the idea of ‘One Nation, One Election’, ‘One Nation, One Tax’, One Nation, One Ration Card’, the push for ‘Union Civil Code’, propagating a ‘double-engine sarkar’ of the BJP, and the implemented GST and so on --- disregarding and undermining the very essence of the country’s federal structure eroding the fiscal and, therefore, economic policy space of State governments.
Though B R Ambedkar, the chairperson of the drafting committee, was cautious while replacing the word ‘Federation’ with ‘Union’ to invoke the ‘indestructible’ unity among differences and diversity, his next-generation compatriots started looking for the elusive ‘oneness’.