India's Changing "Left"

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...1997, then U.S. President Bill Clinton tried to say flattering things about India's achievements since gaining independence from Britain; he said that India "has become a model for other nations and people around the globe who are still striving to build civil societies, to institutionalize democratic values of free expression and religion and to find strength in their diversity"(Aikman 65). Another compliment which emanated from left field comes from famed economist John Kenneth Galbraith when he called India a functioning anarchy (Rudolph and Rudolph PG). His Western interpretation was probably in response to the cacophony of India's endemic pluralism (PG). However, by modifying "anarchy" with "functioning," he supported the idea that India's brand of pluralism works (PG).
Yet, India is an enigma. It is a nation that is hard to pin down in terms of politics in the past, present and what the future might bring. What is apparent is that there had been a great deal of leftist politics in the air, but this is changing. Some have said that India's leftist politics have been an outright failure, but...

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