CPI(M) Election Manifesto 2019
Communist Party of India
(Marxist)
Election
Manifesto
17th Lok Sabha
2019
Part I
The five
years rule of the BJP government headed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been
an unmitigated disaster for the country and the people.
These
elections are the most crucial in the history of independent India. What is at
stake is the very future of the secular democratic republic, as enshrined in
our Constitution. The future is at stake, because, the BJP-led NDA government,
under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, promotes the unprecedented sharpening of
communal polarisation severely disrupting the harmony of our rich, diverse
social fabric. It has mounted a brazen and continuing assault on all
Constitutional authorities and institutions during these last five years. The
BJP continuing to head the central government will further undermine the
fundamental pillars of our Constitution.
Hence, the
primary task before India’s electorate is to ensure the defeat of this
government and give a mandate for the establishment of an alternative secular
government that can defend our Constitutional republic and, then, proceed to
further consolidate it. This can, however, succeed only if the current policy
direction is radically shifted in people’s favour. This, in turn, requires a stronger
presence of the CPI(M) and the Left in the 17th Lok Sabha of India.
Attacks on Democracy
These five
years have seen a vicious authoritarian onslaught on all Constitutional
institutions and authorities as well as the Constitutionally guaranteed rights
of the people.
Some instances:
Parliament’s functioning has been severely curtailed. The government’s
accountability to parliament and the parliamentarians’ accountability to the
people, is the manner in which the people exercise their sovereignty, as
contained in the opening sentence of our Constitution — We the People. This is being undermined.
The
independent functioning of the upper house, Rajya Sabha, has been undermined by
the Modi Government taking indiscriminate recourse to the ‘Money Bill’ route
bypassing the Rajya Sabha. Parliamentary committees that actually do the work
of legislative supervision have been thoroughly undermined.
Blatant
interference in the judiciary is denying justice to the people and leading
to discontent within the judges responsible for delivering justice to the
people and upholding the Constitution.
Undermining
the primacy of the investigating agency CBI and methodically using it to
further the political objectives of the Prime Minister and the government.
Undermining
the independent regulatory authority of the Reserve Bank
of India seeking to
usurp the RBI’s reserve fund for governmental expenditure.
Curtailing the rights of the working class, peasantry and
all sections of the working people to organise protests demanding redressal.
Intrusion
into the fundamental right to privacy of every Indian.
Large-scale
attacks on the Constitutional right of freedom of expression. Attacks on media
and those critical of the government on the social media and elsewhere; the
indiscriminate branding of those critical of the RSS/BJP as being
anti-national. The criminalization of democratic dissent; harassment and
intimidation of intellectuals and lawyers standing up in support of those
targeted by the government like Dalits etc.
Violent
physical attacks against critics of the RSS/BJP leading up to the murder of
rationalists and intellectuals like Dr. Narendra Dabholkar, Com. Govind
Pansare, Dr. M.M. Kalburgi and Gauri Lankesh.
Attacks on
Secularism
Aggressively
sharpening
communal polarisation over
contentious issues like temple construction, renaming of public spaces by removing
Muslim names, generating an atmosphere of hatred and violence targeting the
minorities.
Patronising
private
armies in the
guise of cow protection or moral policing. Murderously attacking Dalits and
Muslims. Private armies’ unrestricted activities leading to incidents of mob
lynching.
Aggressive
Communalisation of the Indian Education System
RSS
functionaries are brazenly being appointed to high positions in all
universities, institutions of higher education, research bodies, cultural
academies etc.; in order to communalise the Indian education system.
They are
seeking to change the content of
curriculum at all
levels, particularly syllabus of school text books to advance the Hindutva agenda.
Disastrous
Economic Policies
During
these five years, every area of economic activity has been opened up for direct foreign investment promoting the maximisation of
profits by them.
Large scale
privatisation
of public
assets and handing over prime assets to chosen foreign and Indian corporates.
Unfettered
promotion of crony
capitalism as
reflected in the Rafale scam the granting of rights to privatise domestic
airports and India’s first power sector SEZ to the Adani group on the eve of elections
etc. Removing all previous curbs on funding of political parties, introduction
of electoral bonds as the route to reap the spoils of such cronyism.
Facilitating
and promoting the loot of public money as reflected in the Rs. 11 lakh crore
plus amount of NPAs.
Destruction
of livelihood of crores of people surviving on cash transactions through demonetisation. Virtual destruction of the micro,
small and medium enterprises (MSME), the largest employment provider after
agriculture, through the implementation of the GST. The Mudra loan NPAs rose to 53 per
cent in the
first nine months of 2018-19 from 2017-18.
Unprecedented
Attacks on People’s Livelihood
Denial and
drastic reduction in people’s
entitlements under the public
distribution system to subsidised food, MNREGA etc.
Deepening
Agrarian Distress leading to the ruination of the Indian farmer and the growth in distress suicides
People’s
life in rural India has never been worse. The real earnings of the rural people
have declined in an unprecedented fashion.
Farm income
growth crashed to the lowest in 14 years during the last quarter of
October-December, 2018 at 2.67 per cent. (Central Statistics Office). RBI
reports that loans that are not returned in the farm sector increased to Rs. 1
lakh crore in September 2018 from Rs.70,000 crores in September 2017. This is
the level of agrarian distress leading to rising distress suicides of farmers.
Unemployment
Our youth are frustrated due to the sharp
fall in employment opportunities during the last few years. Modi had promised
creation of 2 crore new jobs annually, i.e., 10 crores by now. Reality is that the
unemployment rate rose to the highest levels in 45 years at 6.1 per cent
(NSSO). Unemployment rate in February 2019 increased to 7.1 per cent from 5.9
per cent in 2018 (Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy). Situation in rural
India is worse. NSSO reports a 3.2 crore job loss of casual labourers from
2011-12 to 2017-18 affecting over 1.5 crore families dependant on incomes from
casual labour and agriculture.
Growing Attacks on SCs and STs
There has
been a steady increase in crimes against Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes,
especially in Gujarat and the erstwhile BJP ruled states of Madhya Pradesh and
Rajasthan.
Large
sections of the adivasis have been deprived of their land pattas due to them
under the Forest Rights Act.
An
illustration of such increasing attacks is in the state of Gujarat with its
much advertised ‘Gujarat Model’, where crimes against SCs and STs increased by
32 per cent and 55 per cent respectively during the last five years (Gujarat
Assembly records).
Increasing Violence Against Women
Women have
been subjected to increased violence. The year 2016 reported a big increase in
crimes against women – four rapes on an average every hour. Since then the
Government has stopped publishing statistics by the National Crime Records
Bureau in this regard.
The overall
dehumanization of our society reflected in growing atrocities
against women, particularly the girl child, with gruesome incidents of gang-rape
and murders of young girls.
Enriching the Rich and Impoverishing the Poor
During
these five years the share of the total wealth accruing to the top one per cent
of our population increased from 49 per cent in 2014 to 73 per cent in 2018.
Sharp
decline in the working conditions for the working class and employees is
accompanied by unbearable hike in the price of petroleum products with the
government refusing to reduce its taxes and duties.
Indian Economy Undermined
The lowest
growth rate of GDP during these five years ─ from 8.2 per cent in 2013-14 to 7
per cent, in the first three quarters of 2018-19 even according to the
motivated data series introduced by this government. According to the earlier
data series this stands at mere 4.7 per cent.
In the last
quarter GDP growth rate fell further to 6.6 per cent indicating that the
economy is sliding into a recession. So much for Modi’s claims of India being
the “fastest growing economy” in the world!
GST
collections, despite all the tall claims, have shown a steady decline from 7.8
per cent in 2017-18 to 5.8 per cent in 2018-19. This reflects a massive slowdown
in the economy.
Demonetisation
and GST were a double whammy attack undermining the country’s economic
fundamentals. Predemonetization Global GDP was 2.6 per cent and grew post demonetization
to 3.1 per cent. In contrast, post demonetization India’s GDP growth fell from
7.8 per cent to 6.8 per cent.
Destruction
of people’s livelihood has led to a drastic fall in levels of domestic demand
crippling manufacturing and industrial growth. As a consequence, the country’s
leading automobile manufacturer, Maruti Suzuki has announced a production cut
of 27 per cent citing the fall in demand. The eight core infrastructure
industries growth saw a decline of 2.9 per cent between February 2014 and
January 2019. The index of Industrial Production (IIP) registered an abysmal
low of -0.3 per cent in November 2018 compared to an average growth of 5.7 per
cent in the preceding seven months.
Depreciation
of the rupee to its historically lowest levels ─ the value of the rupee to a US
dollar was 63.19 in 2014. This shot up to 71.76 in 2019.
Drastic
fall in India’s export earnings ─ between February 2014 and January 2019
India’s trade balance declined by a whopping 29.8 per cent.
Growing
current account deficit i.e. gap between India’s import and export values has
been registered in these five years. The Current Account Deficit increased from
1.1 per cent of the GDP in 2017-18 to 2.9 per cent in 2018-19. In dollar terms
this translates to a deficit growth from 6.1 billion US dollars to 19.1
billion.
Agricultural
growth is at a record low during these years.
Agricultural
growth rate fell from 5.1 percent to 2.7 per cent and further to 1.7 per cent
between February 2015 and February 2019 (CSO). The fourth successive negative
growth rate registered in the last four quarters.
Attacks on
Federal Structure
Sharp
deterioration of Centre-State relations
GST
implementation has negated the rights of the states to raise revenues.
The
abolition of the Planning Commission has denied a forum for the states to
pursue their economic plans and objectives.
The Modi
government is constantly threatening non-BJP state governments with dismissal
under Article 356.
These five
years have seen an unequal and unfair distribution of tax revenues between the
Centre and the states.
National
Security
The Modi
government’s Jammu & Kashmir policy has been a disaster further alienating
the people of the valley.
The
incidents of terror have exponentially grown. Between 2009-14 and 2014-19, the
number of terrorist attacks increased from 109 to 626; the number of security
personnel killed increased from 139 to 483; the number of civilians killed
increased from 12 to 210 and the number of ceasefire violations increased from
563 to 5596.
There is an
alarming rise in numbers of local youth joining militant groups. Local
militants killed rose from 16 in 2014 to 191 in 2018.
This
government betrayed the promises made to the people of Kashmir of initiating a
political dialogue with all stakeholders and implementing confidence building
measures.
Surgical
strikes following the Uri terrorist attack have failed to end cross border
terrorist attacks leading up to Pulwama.
Post Indian
air force striking terrorist target inside Pakistan at Balakot, terrorist
attacks have continued with more security personnel killed.
BJP-RSS are
engaging in a despicable politicising of this issue when the entire country and
all opposition parties stood as one to fight terrorism.
Foreign
Policy
Highlights
of Abandonment of India’s Independent Foreign Policy:
Foreign
policy orientation changed to dovetail to US global strategic interests,
reducing India as a junior partner of US imperialism.
Deterioration
of friendly relations with all our neighbours.
Deepening
defence ties with USA and Israel.
Virtual abandonment
of India’s leadership role in the non-aligned
movement.
Abandoning
India’s traditional solidarity with the people of different countries whose
sovereignty is being attacked by US imperialism, including military
interventions. The latest instance being Venezuela.
Opening up
of India’s defence installations to USA and collaborating as a major defence
partner of USA.
Brazen
Betrayal of all 2014 promises
During
these five years the BJP, particularly Narendra Modi has betrayed every single
promise that was made to the Indian people — generation of two crore jobs every
year i.e. ten crores by now; an MSP of 1.5 times the total cost of production
for the farmers; return of black money and depositing Rs. 15 lakhs in the
account of all Indians and so on.
Given this
grim record, these general elections must seek accountability of this Modi
government over the balance sheet of promises made and their betrayal.
However,
most important is the fact that these elections are the most crucial in
independent India that will determine the future of our secular democratic
Constitutional order.
In order to
safeguard the Constitutional Republic, to further consolidate it and to change
the policy direction towards a radical people’s oriented one, it is imperative
that the BJP and its allies be defeated.
CPI(M)’s
appeal to the Indian Electorate to:
a) Defeat
the BJP alliance
b) To
increase the strength of the CPI(M) and the Left in the Lok Sabha; and
c) To
ensure that an alternative secular government is formed at the Centre.
Part
II
Alternative
Policies
It is clear
that what the country and the people need is an alternate trajectory of
economic growth and overall development. This can only be achieved on the basis
of a policy shift towards pro-people policies rejecting the current package of
policies being pursued by the BJP government and its agenda of sharpening communal
polarization.
India has
no dearth of resources. If the current loot of our resources through
crony
capitalism and corruption scams like the Rafale aircraft deal are plugged, then
enough resources are available for providing every citizen in our country with
education, quality health care, employment and a decent livelihood. This, however,
requires a radical shift in the policy direction that needs to be ensured.
Highlights
The
highlights of such an alternative policy platform which the CPI(M) is
pledged to
implement are:
·
Protect the secular principle and democratic
rights enshrined in the
Constitution.
·
Enforce the
farmers’ right to sell their produce at a Minimum Support
Price,
which is at least 50 per cent higher than the total cost of production.
·
Statutory
minimum wage for workers of not less than Rs. 18,000 per
month; wages
linked to Consumer Price Index.
·
Universal public distribution system with
provision of 35 kilograms of
Food grains
per family, or, 7 kg per individual at a maximum price of Rs.
2 per kg.
·
Right to
free health care; end private insurance led healthcare; public
expenditure
on health to be raised to 5 per cent of GDP.
· Implement
one-third reservation for women in Parliament and state assemblies; take
comprehensive steps to end violence against women and children.
·
Major expansion of public educational system –
schools and higher
education –
with quality upgradation; public expenditure on education to be 6 per cent of
GDP; end communalization of education system and ensure its democratic
character.
·
Right to
work as a Constitutional right; provision of unemployment allowance for
jobless.
·
Old age
pension with minimum monthly pension which is not less than
half the
minimum wage, or, Rs. 6,000 per month, whichever is higher, for all citizens.
·
Halt
privatisation of public sector enterprises and rollback privatisation in defence,
energy and railways and basic services.
·
Reservation
in jobs & education in private sector for SCs & STs.
·
Raise taxes
on rich and corporate profits; restore wealth tax for superrich and introduce
inheritance tax; restore long term capital gains tax.
·
Reform the
electoral system by introduction of proportional representation with partial
list system; scrap electoral bonds; State
funding in
kind for electoral expenses.
In Defence
of Secularism
The CPI(M)
stands for the separation of religion and politics and for the passage and
implementation of all legislative measures necessary to make this effective. Communal
violence should be dealt with firmly. Secular values should be promoted by the
State in all spheres. The CPI(M) will work towards:
·
Removal of RSS personnel appointed in key
positions by the BJP
government.
·
Enacting a comprehensive law
against communal violence; ensuring speedy justice and adequate compensation
and State support to the victims of communal violence without infringing on the
federal framework.
·
Immediate
banning of all illegal private armies and vigilante groups like the various
‘senas’ that are attacking dalits and minorities in the name of cow protection
and spreading communal hatred. Enactment of appropriate legal measures for
reining in and taking action against organisations and institutions involved in
spreading communal hate and attacking minorities; enact a law against lynching.
·
Ensuring exemplary punishment for
perpetrators of communal violence regardless of their public or official
position.
·
Protecting the rights of
minorities to lead a life of equality and dignity
without
any fear or discrimination.
·
Purging
all school textbooks of content reflecting communal bias and
prejudices.
In
Defence of Constitution & Democratic Rights
*
Amend
the Constitution to make parliamentary approval mandatory for
any
international treaty.
*Repeal
the colonial era Sedition Law, Sec. 124A of IPC.
*Repeal
the Armed Forces Special Powers Act and replace it with a suitable law which
provides a legal framework for the operation of the armed forces without the
draconian provisions.
*
Repeal/amend
the National Security Act and the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act.
*
Repeal
Section 499 of IPC relating to defamation.
*
Ratify
the Convention
against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment.
*
Amend
the Indian Penal Code and other statutes to remove the death penalty from the
statutes.
*
Enact
the Citizens Charter and Grievance Redressal Act to provide a legal framework
for ensuring time bound delivery of services and grievance redressal.
*
Enact
legislation to ensure mandatory social auditing and accountability to evaluate
the impact and performance of public programmes must be extended to all areas
of governance and empower every citizen to hold government accountable to its
mandate.
*
Scrapping
of the use of Aadhaar and biometrics for all social welfare measures.
ALTERNATIVE
ECONOMIC POLICIES
Alternative
Trajectory of Growth
The
CPI(M) will work for economic policies that
* Restore the Planning
Commission.
*
Integrate growth with employment generation
towards creating full employment and money in the hands of the people to boost demand.
*
Enlarge the resource base by taxing the
rich, corporate profits and luxury
goods.
*
Increase public investments in agricultural
production, research and irrigation.
*
Allocate adequate resources for public
investment for providing physical and social infrastructure – electricity,
public transport, ports, schools, colleges, and public hospitals.
*
Favour the production of goods for mass
consumption and not unsustainable luxury goods.
*
Public provisioning and subsidies for
inputs such as seeds, fertilizers, electricity/diesel.
*
Provide incentives for research and
development and special initiatives to
increase
competitiveness of small and medium enterprises that provide much greater
employment.
*
Scrapping the Fiscal Responsibility and
Budget Management Act and setting a minimum floor for social sector spending as
a binding constraint
in fiscal
exercise for both Centre and state governments.
*
Halt any further dilution of Government
equity in public sector banks and
Strengthen
the public sector in banking and insurance with strict adherence to priority
sector lending norms.
*
All regulatory authorities of the
financial sector should mandatorily be accountable to Parliament and
legislative oversight.
*
Involve state governments in major
economic decisions of national significance, restore decision making powers of
states and allow greater fiscal flexibility for revenue raising by states.
Resource
Mobilization
The CPI (M)
will:
*
Tax speculative capital gains by
restoring Long-Term Capital Gains Tax
and
increasing Securities Transaction Tax.
*
Ensure all the loan defaulters who have
fled India to avoid legal action
are brought
to book and the looted monies recovered with interest.
*
Restore
wealth tax for the superrich and introduce inheritance tax.
*
Corporate profit tax should be increased by
increasing statutory rates so
that
effective tax rates are not low, causing huge loss of revenue.
*
Taxation of capital gains from the international
transfer of shares in foreign company with underlying assets in India.
*
GST to be overhauled respecting the
federal structure of our country and
the rights
of the states by sharing the resources with them.
Financial
Sector Regulation
In order to
maintain predominant State control over finance and revival of
development
finance, the CPI(M) stands for:
*
Reversing moves towards Full Capital Account
Convertibility; re-imposing
controls on
the outflow and inflow of finance capital.
Prohibiting
Participatory Notes used by the Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs);
discourage speculative finance.
*
Safeguarding the autonomy of the RBI and for
the modernisation of the financial regulatory system. RBI’s regulatory role
over banks to be strengthened. RBI to come up with clear guidelines for banks
to stop charging customers for each and every banking service and take action against
culprits who have caused loss to the banks.
*
Immediately halting the process of issuing
fresh licenses for banks in the private sector and review of the Banking
Regulation (Amendment) Act 2012.
*
Ensure that banks retain their
independent identity and review all the steps taken for the merger of public
sector banks and putting a stop to the closure of bank branches.
*
Preventing takeover of Indian banks by foreign
banks.
*
Strict measures to ensure that big business
houses are prevented from transferring the risks of their projects to banks and
strict action against defaulters and strengthen the banking regulations for the
collection of Non Performing Assets. Publication of defaulter lists,
transparent recovery measures, assets recovery procedures including attaching
of properties and sale, along with a moratorium on willful defaulters, companies
and their offshoots, from accessing any fresh loan or restructuring. Strict
action and criminal procedure against willful defaulters.
*
Prohibit
use of tax havens and illegal flows of capital; plug loopholes in double
taxation avoidance agreements.
*
Strengthen
small savings with proper regulation; strengthen legislation on chit funds to
ensure protection of deposits of common people; confiscate the properties of
ponzi scheme owners and arrange payments to the affected depositors.
*
Withdrawing the proposal to open finance
sector for the entry of FDI.
*
Ensure the
FDI cap in the insurance sector of 26 per cent.
Infrastructure
The CPI(M)
stands for:
*
Reversal of privatisation of defence
production sector; immediately taking measures to rescind private participation
in defence production; stopping FDI inflows in defence sector; strengthening
and expanding State owned defence industry to achieve self reliance in defence.
*
Increasing public investment in
infrastructure; adequate Plan outlays for power, communications, railways,
roads, ports and airports.
*
No FDI in railways; revoke the
decision to privatise Railways, Defence, Port and Dock, Banks, Insurance, Coal,
water resources etc.
*
Reviewing energy and telecom policies in
tune with the interests of self reliant national development; using the
domestic market to develop power and telecom equipment manufacturing in the
country.
*
Reversing the trend towards private power
producers; privatising distribution companies; stop the franchising of towns to
private players.
*
Changing telecom policies to promote
telecom penetration and connectivity in rural areas; strengthening the public
sector telecom companies BSNL and MTNL and allocating necessary spectrum for
them to upgrade their services.
*
Increasing broadband penetration and
universal affordable access to internet.
*
Reviewing of privatisation of infrastructure
through the PPP route.
*
Rescind the orders for the private
maintenance and upgradation of airports. No further PPPs in domestic airports
already modernised by Airport Authority of India.
* Placing emphasis on rural
infrastructure; increased outlays on rural roads, electrification etc.
Trade
Issues
The CPI(M)
stands for:
* Protecting Indian interests and
standing up to the US moves to increase tariffs on Indian goods and waging
‘trade wars’.
* Restoring measures to protect small
and marginal peasants, including quantitative restrictions.
* Keeping sectors like health, education,
water resources, banking and financial services out of GATS; press for review
of the TRIPS agreement.
* Reviewing existing Free Trade
Agreements (FTAs); do not proceed with negotiations for FTA with European Union
on existing terms.
Strengthening
Federalism
For a
thorough restructuring of Centre-State relations, the CPI(M) stands for:
* Replacing Article 356 with a
suitable provision and amending Article 355 to prevent their misuse.
* Review the current role and
position of Governors. Governors to be appointed by the President from a panel
of three eminent persons suggested by the Chief Minister.
* Devolving 50 per cent of the total
pool of collection of Central taxes to the States; sharing of surcharges and
cesses with the states.
* Make non-tax revenues of Central
government a part of the divisible pool and introduction of a Constitutional
amendment for this.
*Conditionalities
imposed upon the States like the passage of FRBM Act to be withdrawn; states to
have a say in the composition and terms of reference of the Finance
Commissions.
* Transferring Centrally Sponsored
Schemes under a State subject with funds to the states.
* Constitutional amendment to make
the decisions of the Inter-State Council binding on the Union Government;
National Development Council to be granted Constitutional status; restoring the
Planning Commission, which is to act as an executive wing of the NDC.
* Setting a target for minimum level
of Local Self-Government expenditure to GDP; funds devolved to the local bodies
to be routed through the state Governments.
Industry
The CPI(M)
stands for:
*
Strengthening
and expansion of the public sector in the core and strategic areas by injecting
fresh capital and technology; promoting autonomy and efficiency in the public sector.
*
Manufacturing
sector growth to be given priority through a long term industrial policy that
strategises investment and creates incentives for employment generation.
*
Complete
halt to disinvestment and privatisation of profit-making and potentially viable
PSUs; give revival package to the important PSUs in the public interest.
*
Revival
and opening of sick jute mills and tea plantations.
*
Encouraging
small and medium enterprises in labour intensive sectors with adequate
incentives, infrastructure support and sufficient credit from banks; increasing
financial allocation to Cluster Development Projects (CDPs).
*
Protection
of domestic industry from indiscriminate lowering of import duties and takeover
of existing Indian companies by foreign companies; encouraging the private
sector to invest in manufacturing and services sectors; providing incentives to
the private sector linked to job creation and R&D efforts.
*
Prohibiting
FDI in retail trade; regulating e-commerce, domestic corporate retailers
through a licensing policy.
*
Amending
SEZ Act and Rules to do away with myriad tax concessions and regulate land-use;
ensuring strict implementation of labour laws in all SEZs.
*
Halting
further liberalization and privatization of the mineral sector; return of all
unexplored coal blocks allotted to private sector for captive use to Coal India
Ltd.
*
Making
Coal India Ltd. a unitary company and only agency for mining coal and supplying
to industries and the customers; immediately revoke decision allowing
commercial mining of coal mines.
*
Protecting
traditional industries such as textiles, carpets, handicrafts, leather,
handloom, coir, etc.
*
Providing
inputs at controlled rates to workers in these sectors; improving design,
technology and skills, and extending adequate facilities and extension services
for marketing etc.
Revival
of Agriculture
In
order to reverse the agrarian crisis, make agriculture remunerative and ensure
enhanced incomes of the peasantry, the CPI(M) proposes steps to:
Legislate
the farmers’ right to sell their produce at an MSP which will be at least, one
and a half times of the total cost of inputs.
Effect
a substantial increase in public expenditure on the rural sector to
enhance
purchasing power of the rural poor and increase productivity in agriculture.
Increase
public investment and expand public institutions for agricultural
research
and extension services.
Re-impose
trade restrictions to prevent both dumping and excessive
exports
that jeopardize national food security.
Revive
commodity boards to set floor prices for commercial crops.
Provide cheap institutional credit to the
agricultural sector at a minimal
rate of
interest.
Expand public investment in power supply to
rural areas and stop privatization of electricity; ensure uninterrupted supply
of power to agriculture; expand irrigation facilities.
Provide basic amenities and improvements in
rural infrastructure.
Scrap the Nutrient Based Subsidy regime in
fertilisers; repeal the Seed Act and introduce farmer-friendly seed
legislation.
Repeal the model APMC Act which advocates
contract farming; bring farmer-friendly reforms in agricultural markets.
Shun unequal Foreign Trade Agreements and all
trade related negotiations based on the principle of national economic
sovereignty, and subject it to Parliamentary scrutiny.
Reverse changes in the intellectual property
regime that favour big business; ensure strict regulation of private
agricultural research with regard to protection of biodiversity.
Promote and strengthen co-operatives for
agricultural production, water use, input purchase, crop storage, output
marketing and dairy.
Land Issues
The CPI(M)
shall:
Amend the Right to Fair Compensation and
Transparency in Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act 2013 to
ensure its universal application on all laws requiring land acquisition,
rigorous definition of public purpose, full and prior informed consent from all
affected persons, binding social impact assessment and compensation and R&R
in such manner as to ensure a far better quality of life and share in enhanced
land value.
Enact suitable policies to adequately
compensate all dispossessed and displaced farmers.
Reverse the current thrust to dilute
land-ceiling laws; speedy and comprehensive steps for implementing land
reforms.
Prevent the encroachment and takeover of
common lands like pastures, community forests, scrublands, etc.
Protect all government and public sector land
held in public trust from transfer by lease, sale, diversion or any other
manner to the private sector.
Takeover and distribution of all surplus land
above ceiling and handing over of cultivable wasteland to landless and poor
peasant households free of cost, with priority to SCs and STs; joint pattas to
be distributed including equal right of women to the land.
Provide house sites and homestead land to all
sections of the rural and urban landless.
Record tenancy and protect the rights of
tenants in all states where this has not been done.
Prohibit
land grab for real estate speculation.
For Food Security
To work
towards a hunger free India, the CPI(M) will:
Seek elimination of the present targeted
system and establishment of a reformed and strengthened universal public
distribution excluding income-tax payees. No linkage with Aadhaar.
Provision of a minimum of 35 kgs of foodgrains
for a family or 7 kgs of foodgrains per individual, whichever amount is higher,
at a maximum price of Rs. 2 per kg of foodgrains.
Support initiatives of state Governments in
this sphere.
Along with foodgrains, the PDS will supply
essential commodities such as pulses, edible oil, sugar, kerosene at controlled
prices.
The food supplies through ICDS and Mid-Day
Meal Schemes will get higher allocations to ensure hot cooked nutritious meals
and be brought under the Food Security law as a legal right.
Implementation of Food Security Act allowance
of Rs. 6000 for pregnant women without conditionalities.
Special measures like free kitchens for
vulnerable sections of the population such as migrant workers, destitutes,
widows, disabled persons.
Strengthen the rationing system in remote and
hilly areas to ensure that adivasis and other vulnerable sections in those
areas have easy access to food security.
Twelve LPG cylinders per year to be provided
at subsidized rate with no Aadhaar linkage.
No cash transfers in lieu of foodgrains.
Curbing Price Rise
The CPI(M)
proposes a series of measures to control rising prices of essential
commodities.
These include:
Reversing the deregulated regime of pricing of
petroleum products and establishing an administered price control mechanism.
Reducing the central excise and customs duties
on petroleum products.
Controlling prices of natural gas and price of
subsidized gas cylinders.
Banning futures trade in agricultural
commodities as recommended by the Parliamentary Standing Committee.
Acting strictly against hoarding and
black-marketeering of essential commodities and strengthening provisions of the
Essential Commodities Act.
Strengthening disclosure norms for private
stocks of foodgrains held in godowns and warehouses.
Strengthening PDS and using buffer stocks
judiciously as a countervailing measure against rising market prices.
Controlling export of foodgrains when prices
are high and rising
Ensuring control of the prices of essential
medicines.
Foreign Policy
CPI (M)
will work for:
An independent and non-aligned foreign policy,
promoting multipolarity. Strengthen BRICS, SCO and IBSA. Reactivise SAARC and strengthen
ties with the countries in our immediate neighborhood.
Strengthening multilateral forums like the UN
to deal with all disputes between countries; democratising the Security Council
and the UN structure.
Opposing interventions and regime changes
imposed by the United States as is happening in Venezuela and in many countries
in Latin America.
Strengthening relations with West Asia and
South East Asia and establishing close ties with the Community of Latin
American and Caribbean countries (CELAC).
Resume dialogue with Pakistan to resolve all
outstanding issues including cross-border terrorism; promote people to people
relations between India and Pakistan.
Special efforts to build relations and ties
with Bangladesh and settle the Teesta water agreement.
Address the concerns of Rohingyas who continue
to remain as stateless.
Engage with the Sri Lankan government to
devolve powers to the Northern and Eastern region, so that the Tamil-speaking
people can have autonomy within a united Sri Lanka. Pursue the efforts for an independent
credible inquiry into the atrocities committed in the last phase of the war.
Reverse the pro-Israeli tilt in foreign
policy.
Security
Matters
The CPI(M)
stands for:
Revising the various defence agreements, like
the LEMOA, COMCASA, entered by the current government with the US; withdraw
from the Defence Framework Agreement with the US; stopping further steps to enter
into military collaboration agreements with the United States; promoting the
policy of no foreign military bases in South Asia.
Revise the Indo-US nuclear agreement; no
import of foreign nuclear reactors; pursue self-reliance in civilian nuclear
energy based on domestic uranium and thorium reserves.
Pursuing universal nuclear disarmament through
the UN; providing parliamentary sanction for moratorium on testing; striving
for a denuclearized environment in South Asia; seeking removal of nuclear weapons
from the US military base in Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean.
Pursuing policies for de-militarisation of
cyber space.
Protecting Indian Internet and
telecommunications networks from cyber attacks and surveillance by building
indigenous capability.
Creating a national security apparatus, which
will work within the framework of the parliamentary democratic system.
Increasing the coordination between various
intelligence agencies and ensure proper action on credible intelligence outputs
for the protection of people’s lives.
Achieve self-reliance in defence by expanding,
developing and strengthening the state owned defence industry and ensuring full
capacity utilization.
Ensure a system of transparency and
accountability in the purchase of defence equipments and armaments. Institute
speedy investigation and punishment in corruption scams, like Rafale aircraft
deal.
Jammu &
Kashmir
The CPI(M)
is committed to:
A political solution to the Kashmir problem
based on maximum autonomy for the state based on the full scope of Article 370
of the Constitution; autonomous set-up to be created with the regions of Jammu,
Kashmir and Ladakh being given regional autonomy; oppose all the attempts to
remove or review Article 35 (A) of the Constitution.
Urgently initiating a political process
through a dialogue/talks with all concerned parties.
Strong steps to be taken to prevent excesses
by security forces against innocent people; ban use of pellet guns and other
lethal weapons on protesters.
Initiating Confidence Building Measures in
Kashmir, by talking to all sections of the society and acting upon their
genuine grievances.
Ensure economic development of the state,
focusing particularly on generating employment for the youth and reconstructing
the damaged infrastructure.
Complete withdrawal of AFSPA.
North-East
The CPI(M)
is committed to:
The scrapping of the Citizenship Amendment
Bill that makes religion as a criteria for granting citizenship.
The immediate completion of the NRC process in
Assam according to the
Supreme
Court guidelines; no Indian must be excluded.
The North East be declared a priority region
for development; developing physical infrastructure and special employment
schemes for the youth; border fencing to be completed expeditiously.
Protecting and expanding the administrative
and financial powers under the Sixth Schedule; protection of the identity of
the various ethnic groups and nationalities.
In Defence
of the Rights of the Working People
Working
Class
The CPI(M)
stands for:
Ensuring that statutory minimum wage for
workers is not less than Rs. 18,000;
minimum wage to be linked to the Consumer Price Index; wage fixation to be
based on 15th ILC recommendations.
Periodic wage revision to all Central PSU
workers without insisting any affordability condition; immediate resolution of
the issues of the central government employees related to the recommendations
of the 7th Pay Commission.
Scrapping all anti-worker and pro-employer
amendments to labour laws. Ensuring strictest implementation of all labour laws
including the law on interstate migrant workers; strengthening labour
departments and enforcement agencies including labour/factory inspectorates
with adequate manpower and facilities; filling up vacancies of judges and supporting
staff in all industrial tribunals and labour courts.
Improving the legislation on Unorganized
Sector Workers and implementing the recommendations of the Standing Committee
on Labour in this regard; special social security measures for migrant workers
and plantation workers, amending the law to move away from rigid industrial and
occupational classification of Boards with a single window access for all
workers; constituting national fund for unorganized workers with adequate
budgetary financial allocations; universal coverage of all unorganised workers,
irrespective of poverty line stipulations, with minimum social security
benefits including old age pension, health including maternity, and child care
benefits, accident and life insurance; comprehensive legislation covering
social security and working conditions for all workers including agricultural
workers.
Scrapping of the “New Pension Scheme” and the
PFRDA Act and putting in place a benefit-defined pension scheme with adequate
funding by employers and government for all workers/employees ensuring at least
a pension of 50 per cent of last pay drawn with indexation.
Withdrawing the Motor Vehicle (Amendment)
Bill; providing social security to unorganized transport workers.
Ensuring recognition of trade unions through
secret ballot and protection of trade union rights; making recognition of union
mandatory by law in all establishments; ratification of ILO Convention No 87
and 98 relation to right to freedom of association and collective bargaining
along with the ILO Convention 189 on Domestic Workers.
Adopting an effective scheme for workers’
participation in management in both public and private sector; strengthen
Bipartism and Tripartism; no decision to be taken on any issue related to
labour without consensus through discussion with trade unions, ensure regular,
meaningful social dialogue with workers representatives.
Discouraging contractualisation and
casualisation of work; stringent implementation of The Contract Labour
(Regulation And Abolition) Act; paying equal wages and benefits for contract
workers as the regular workers for doing the same and similar job; stop
outsourcing and contractorisation of jobs of permanent and perennial nature;
immediately revoking ‘Fixed Term Employment’ which is in violation of the
spirit of ILO Recommendation 204 which India has ratified; protecting the right
of contract workers and workers in the unorganized sector to form unions, have
full-fledged membership and voting rights in trade unions and exercise their
fundamental right to unionize and strike. Strengthening Workers Welfare boards.
Ensuring equal remuneration for women workers
in all areas of work; adopting social security measures for working women
including maternity benefits, pension and health insurance
for women workers in the unorganized sector
including home based workers.
Strict
implementation of the Sexual Harassment of Women at the Workplace Act.
Implementing
paid maternity leave of 26 weeks, maternity benefit and crèche facilities for
women workers; recognising all workers employed in different central and state
government schemes including anganwadi workers and helpers, ASHAs and others
employed in the National Health Mission, Mid Day Meal workers, para teachers etc.,
as workers and providing them with all attendant benefits including statutory
minimum wages, social security benefits like pension etc., and ensuring their
trade union rights.
Workers
having active and effective participation in all Welfare Boards constituted for
their welfare. The
functioning of these boards would be strengthened so that the workers
can get registered with the board and have easy access to welfare
benefits.
Peasantry
The
CPI(M) stands for:
Implementation
of the pro-farmer recommendations of the National Commission on Farmers to
ensure that agriculture becomes remunerative.
Ensure
stable and remunerative crop prices covering all costs and crops; increase MSP
to cover full costs including family labour, land rent etc., and give a return
of at least 50 per cent above costs (C2+50).
Assuring
timely and sufficient procurement of all crops in all regions by expanding
procurement facilities.
Ensure
comprehensive debt relief and loan waiver to the distressed farmers covering
both institutional and private debt owed to moneylenders.
Instituting
a genuinely comprehensive crop insurance scheme to cover all types of risks for
crop and cattle covering all farmers including tenant farmers and sharecroppers
with additional subsidies for small and marginal farmers.
Ensure
provision of high quality inputs at affordable prices to all cultivators in a
timely and reliable manner.
Safeguard
the peasantry’s right to traditional seeds and biodiversity as well as to save
and reuse all seeds.
Launch
a National Soil Amelioration and Replenishment Programme along
with
sustainable management of water resources.
Extend
labour subsidy to the small and marginal farmers under MNREGS.
Agricultural
Workers
The
CPI(M) stands for:
Increasing
minimum wages for agricultural workers to Rs 600 per day; ensuring equal wages
for women agricultural workers.
Revamping
the regulatory and implementing mechanism for effective and
strict
enforcement of the minimum wages act. Removing the cap of 100 days in
MNREGS; fixing minimum wages not less than
minimum wages of the state; ensuring payment of unemployment
allowance when workers are not provided work.
Enacting a separate and comprehensive
legislation for agricultural workers to ensure minimum wages, the right to
bargain collectively and measures of social security such as pensions, accident
compensation etc., with central funding.
Redistributing land to agricultural workers,
free of cost; providing homestead land to all rural households; constructing
rural dwellings for all rural workers.
Recognizing the rights of agricultural workers
as persons affected eligible to full compensation and Resettlement &
Rehabilitation in all cases of land acquisition and displacement.
Banning the use of poisonous insecticides
injurious to health like endosulfan and ensuring free medical treatment for
agricultural labour suffering from their ill-effects.
Safeguarding the constitutional rights of
dalit and adivasi workers and ensuring the development of dalit and adivasi
habitations.
Providing full and universal social security
for all agricultural labourers through decentralized tripartite boards with a
single window system with pan Indian eligibility to protect migrants.
Fish
workers
Setting up special welfare board for fish
workers and providing them identity cards and social security schemes.
Banning foreign trawlers and destructive
fishing practices by big trawlers.
Withdrawing the CRZ notification 2018 allowing
more coastal area for activities like tourism, hotels, industries etc., and
handing over the coast to real estate sharks depriving the fishers of their
right to the coasts.
For Equal
Rights and Social Justice
Women
The CPI(M)
stands for:
Enacting the 33 per cent Women’s Reservation
Bill to reserve one-third seats in Parliament and State Assemblies for women
immediately.
Scrap ordinance criminalising triple talaq.
Enact a comprehensive law to prevent
trafficking of women and children for labour and sexual exploitation.
Enact a law for equal rights in marital and
inherited property for all women; strengthen laws relating to maintenance for
women and children; ensure protection and adequate maintenance and
rehabilitation for all deserted women including those who are victims of
instantaneous talaq. Putting in place a series of measures to prevent, curb and
punish those responsible for the horrific increase in violence against women
and children. These include:
Accepting the Verma Committee recommendations
which have been left out of the present amended law; changes in educational
curricula to include subjects related to gender equality; steps to make public
spaces safer for women; ensuring safe access to all public places for women with
disability; increasing punishment for caste based crimes against scheduled
caste and scheduled tribe women; penalties on any personnel including police
personnel who sabotage or delay cases; setting up of fast track courts; make
marital rape an offence; safeguard Section 498A of the Indian Penal Code;
support to victims of sexual violence and acid attacks through a fully funded
rehabilitation scheme especially for children who are victims of sexual
violence; adequate budgetary allocations for implementation of the laws against
domestic violence and against sexual harassment. Strict implementation of the
PCPNDT Act (against sex determination tests and female foeticide) and the activisation
of defunct monitoring committees.
Enacting the following new legislations: a
stand-alone law against socalled
honour
crimes; a law against trafficking of women and children; strengthening the law
for maintenance of women and children including a scheme such as the one
initiated by the erstwhile Left front government in Tripura for an allowance
for deserted women; special schemes for single women including widows and
female headed families; a law to ensure linkages between SHGs and banking
institutions and guarantee of subsidised interest rates of not more than 4 per
cent with special concessions for SHGs of SC/ST women; protective legislation
for domestic workers and for homebased workers.
A code of conduct for all elected
representatives in different spheres to adhere to standards of decency in
public comments and discourse about women and against sexist and misogynist
language which demeans and insults women.
Increasing allocations for women in all gender
budgeting to at least forty per cent of allocations from the present claims of
30 per cent.
Children
The CPI(M)
strongly advocates and will work for the rights of children. It is
committed
to:
Universalisation of the ICDS to cover all
children from the age of 0-6 years. Reverse all measures towards privatisation
of the ICDS; more allocations per child to ensure nutritious meals for children
in anganwadis and in schools and provision of creche facilities in anganwadi
centres.
Expansion of The Right to Education Act to include
all children from the age of 3-18 years. Special provisions for the inclusion
of children with disabilities.
Provision of adequate number of child friendly
playgrounds in each district so that they can play outdoor sports. Amendments
in the Child Labour (Prohibition and Regulation Act) to remove the distinction
between hazardous and non-hazardous work in order to ban all forms of child
labour and to ensure implementation of schemes with additional allocations for
the rehabilitation of all working children.
Special measures to close the continuing gap
between adivasi, dalit children and socially vulnerable groups and communities
and others through specific measures including additional allocations for
setting up residential schools and hostels with modern facilities for scheduled
tribe and scheduled caste children; stringent action against discrimination at any
level.
Complete coverage of basic services, such as
supplementary nutrition, immunization, preschool non-formal education, regular
health checkups
and quick
referral services.
Take effective steps to trace missing children
ensuring public reporting of the status of search.
Strict implementation of the Protection of
Children from Sexual Offences Act.
Provision of shelter and social services to
street children.
Ensuring a total re-haul and reform of the
juvenile justice system and institutions to sensitize them towards helping them
reintegrate into society as responsible citizens.
Youth
The CPI(M)
is committed to:
The inclusion of the Right to Work as a
constitutional right.
Provision of jobs or unemployment allowance.
Lift the ban on recruitment in central
government and state government services. All vacant posts to be filled in
central and state governments within a time bound framework.
Draft a new National Youth Policy to address
the concerns of the youth.
Set up Sports Missions sponsored by both
central and state governments
to promote
sports activities and training facilities for youth. Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes
The CPI(M)
is firmly committed to the abolition of the caste system and all
forms of
caste oppression. In all spheres of basic human rights such as the universal
right to health, education, employment, decent living conditions and security,
it will promote special measures specifically for the advancement of the rights
of scheduled castes and scheduled tribes, including additional allocations.
The CPI(M)
stands for:
Enactment of a central legislation for Special
Component Plan for Scheduled Castes and for the Tribal Sub-Plan which will
provide for Plan outlays at the Centre and the states equivalent to the SC
population at the national and state level for the SCP, and the ST population
at the national and State level for the TSP respectively. Establishment of a
standing committee to monitor the implementation of the Plan with direct
benefits for the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes.
Distribution of 5 acres of arable land for
cultivation for a landless family from SC and ST communities.
Enactment of a central legislation to provide
reservations in the private sector for SCs and STs.
Enforcement and implementation of the
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act 1989 and
the POA Amendment Act 2015. Take steps to incorporate SC/ST (PoA) Act under
Schedule IX of the Constitution and for the establishment of mandatory Special
Courts as per Section 14 of the SCs and STs (PoA) Act 1989 in each district.
Enactment of a special Act for the prevention
of caste, religious and gender based discrimination in educational institutions
and work environments, which will prevent discrimination in admission, enhance access
to quality education, and ensure equality as an integral part of the education
process, along with ensuring fair growth in professional workspaces.
Immediate Publishing of Socio-Economic Caste
Census.
The universal access to hostels and
scholarships for all SC and ST students.
Scheduled
Castes
The CPI(M)
is committed to:
Filling all backlogs in reserved seats and
posts and in promotions through a special timebound recruitment drive; creation
of vocational training facilities for scheduled caste youth; ensure credit
facilities for all self employed and scheduled caste enterprises and assistance
in developing market linkages.
Strong and strict punishment against practices
of untouchability, atrocities and discrimination against scheduled castes.
Amendments to remove loopholes in the
legislation for prevention of manual scavenging and time bound rehabilitation
scheme with adequate allocations; strict measures to stop the inhuman practice
of manual scavenging; compensation, as per Supreme Court judgment, to the families
of those who die while cleaning sewers.
Regularisation of contract labour in safai
services.
Ensuring house sites, houses, sanitation,
water, health, electricity connections to all scheduled caste families and
scheduled caste inhabited areas in a special drive with budgetary allocations
to close the continuing gap between SCs compared to other communities as far as
housing and civic facilities are concerned.
Extending reservations to dalit Christian and
Muslim communities.
Scheduled
Tribes
The CPI(M)
stands for:
Filling all vacancies for ST reserved posts in
all Government services within a legally mandated time framework. Protecting
land rights of adivasis and restoring land illegally alienated from them.
Withdrawal of amendments to LARR which in the name of ease of business removes
all right of consent of Adivasi communities for land acquisition.
Withdrawal of National Forest Policy which
advocates privatisation of forests and replacement with an appropriate policy
protecting tribal rights.
Implementing the Scheduled Tribes and Other
Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act 2006, in full;
amending the Act to include other traditional forest dwellers with 1980 as the
cut-off year; no eviction of Adivasis from their habitat.
Removal of all amendments to Forest
Conservation and Environment related rules and government circulars which
dilute the role of gram sabhas in decision making powers regarding areas in
their jurisdiction.
Protection of rights under PESA and Fifth
Schedule. Ensuring recognition, protection and development of tribal languages
and scripts. Tribal languages such as Bhili, Gondi and Kok Borok to be included
in the Eighth Schedule of the Constitution; the concerned state governments must
recognize the language of adivasis as the state’s official language.
Automatic inclusion of adivasis in the
declared domicile list of the state governments with their ST identity and
rights irrespective of their migration from one state to another.
Including all tribals in the Food Security Act
entitled to subsidized foodgrain.
Enhancement of scholarship for tribal students
and time bound audit of all tribal hostel and upgrading of facilities.
Minorities
The CPI(M)
stands for:
Making the Minorities Commission a statutory
body with enhanced powers and jurisdiction and enhancing the status of its
chairperson and members.
Formulating a sub-plan for the Muslim
minorities on the lines of the tribal
sub-plan in
order to implement Sachar Committee recommendations; the Minority Area
Development Programme introduced after the Sachar Committee to be augmented,
and amended to ensure adequate resources and special initiatives in the sphere
of employment, education and health to be undertaken targeting districts where
the Muslim population is concentrated.
Enacting ‘Prevention of Communal Violence Act’
and ‘Prevention of Minorities Atrocities Act’ in order to prevent the
continuing attacks on the Christians and atrocities on Pastors.
Implementing the recommendations of the
Ranganath Mishra Commission report. As an immediate measure all OBC Muslims
which form the vast majority of the Muslim community to be included in the OBC
quota with specific State wise allocations.
Earmarking 15 per cent of priority sector
lending by banks for the Muslims; subsidised credit to be ensured for the
self-employed Muslim youth. Special emphasis to be laid on the education of
Muslim girls; scholarships and hostel facilities should be substantially
increased for Muslim girl students.
Promoting the teaching of Urdu in schools;
Publishing good quality textbooks in Urdu and filling vacancies of Urdu
teaching posts.
Ensuring compensation and rehabilitation to
all those Muslims acquitted of cases of terror and also ensuring punishment of
officials responsible for implicating them in false cases, subjecting them to
torture etc. Setting up of fast track courts to try all such cases.
Compensation for all victims of mob lynching. OBCs
Ensuring proper implementation of 27 per cent
OBC reservation in Central educational institutions; extending OBC reservation
to all private educational institutions.
Strengthening the National Commission for
Backward Classes.
Simplifying procedures for issuing OBC
certificate.
Designing comprehensive package of schemes, on
the lines of those drawn up for SCs and STs, for employment and poverty
alleviation of OBCs from the economically weaker sections.
Transgender
Passing the Rights of Transgender Persons
Bill, 2014 to uphold the rights of all transgender persons and removing the lacunae
present in the current Transgender Persons Bill, 2018.
Legal recognition and protection to same sex
couples similar to marriage - ‘civil union’ /’same-sex-partnerships’,
legislation/s on similar lines as Special Marriage Act, 1954 so that the partner
can be listed as a dependent, for inheritance, alimony in case of divorce etc.
A comprehensive anti-discriminatory bill
covering LGBT.
Reservation in education institutions;
ensuring horizontal reservation in employment.
Ensuring crimes against LGBT persons are
treated on par with crimes against non-LGBT persons.
Measures to address bullying, violence and
harassment of gender nonconforming and LGBT students, staff and teachers in
educational spaces;
enforcement
of UGC anti-ragging policy amendment (2016) that addresses ragging based on
sexual orientation and gender identity, ensuring accessible and safe bathrooms
for trans, intersex and gender non-conforming students, staff and faculty.
Persons
with Disabilities
The CPI(M)
stands for:
Implementation of the provisions of the Rights
of Persons with Disabilities Act and the Mental Health Care Act supported by
adequate budgetary allocations.
Harmonising all laws in the country in tune
with the United Nations Convention on Rights of Persons with Disabilities. Reviewing
and amending the National Disability Policy.
Simplifying the process of certification.
Speeding up the issuing of UDID.
Clearing backlog in vacancies in all
government departments in a time bound manner. Creation of newer employment
avenues taking the capabilities of disabled persons into account.
Making all buildings, public places, all modes
of transport, information and other avenues fully accessible and barrier free
for people with disabilities; provision of sign language interpreters; making
TV and other broadcast media accessible for the deaf /hard of hearing and the
visually impaired.
Ensuring Dignified Life for persons with
disabilities. Zero tolerance for abuse of disability/disabled persons.
Enhancing the pension to at least Rs. 6,000/- and link it up with the price
index. Provision of caregiver allowance.
Free provision of aids and appliances. Zero
GST with input tax credit on aids, appliances and vehicles used by disabled
persons.
Making education at all levels inclusive. Make
school infrastructure and curriculum inclusive. Making Health facilities
accessible and free for persons with disabilities.
Extending the assistance under the MPLADS fund
to all assistive devices
and
facilities for the disabled.
Proper enumeration of all persons with
disabilities as listed in the schedule of the Rights of Persons with
Disabilities Act, 2016.
Households with PwDs should have first claim
on all land distribution programmes of government surplus land as well as
ceiling surplus land.
FOR
PEOPLES’ WELFARE
CPI (M)
will work for:
Education
Public expenditure on education to be 6 per
cent of GDP.
Steps to remove communal content in education
and text books. Ensure no Vice-Chancellors or key personnel in State funded
institutions have anti-secular views.
Academic excellence and professional
competence will be the sole criteria
for all
appointments to bodies like Universities, the Indian Council for Historical
Research, Indian Council for Social Science Research, University Grants
Commission, National Council for Educational Research and Training, etc. A
review committee of experts will be set up to address the communalisation of
the school syllabus.
Establishing a Common School Education System;
stop closure or merger of government schools; upgrade government schools on the
Kerala model.
Implementing the Right to Education Act to
provide free and compulsory elementary education; amending the RTE to
institutionalise the concept of neighborhood schooling, extending it beyond the
elementary level and providing free education for all continuing students;
ensuring every school is RTE compliant by 2022.
Expanding
secondary education to reduce dropouts and making it universal; improving
quality of education and infrastructure in SSA schools, allowing flexibility of
rules, timing and other aspects to ensure retention of girl students and pupils
in backward areas and for otherwise marginalized groups.
Set-up Gender Sensitisation Committees Against
Sexual Harassment in
university
and college campuses.
Enacting legislation to regulate fees,
admissions and curricula in private
educational
institutions.
No FDI in higher education.
Formulating progressive and democratic
curriculum and syllabi at all levels of education in a way that recognizes
India’s social and cultural diversity.
Regularise teachers currently employed as
contract or para teachers.
Ensuring democratic rights of students,
teachers and non-teaching staff in all educational institutions; students’
union elections to be made mandatory in all higher educational institutions.
Stop attacks on the autonomy of higher
education institutions.
Enhance public funding for higher education.
Health
Make the right to free health care justiciable
through the enactment of
appropriate
legislations both at Central and State levels.
Public expenditure on health to be raised to
at least 3.5 per cent in the short term and 5 per cent of the GDP in the long
term, which would include a significantly enhanced allocation from the Centre.
Strengthening, expanding and reorienting the
public health system so that it is accountable to local communities and
guarantees free and easy access to a range of comprehensive health care
services. Build and actively promote a predominantly public health system based
framework for the provision of universal health care. Scrap the PMJAY under the
‘Ayushman Bharat’ scheme based on the discredited ‘insurance model’.
Immediately and effectively reversing the
trend of privatisation of health care services and outsourcing of services
through PPPs.
Extending and recasting the ESI scheme to
effectively protect workers' health.
Regulating the private health care sector, especially
the corporate owned hospital sector through urgent and stringent measures.
Bring them under the Clinical Establishment Act. Modify the National Clinical
Establishment Act, 2010 to ensure observance of patients’ rights; regulation of
the rates and quality of various services.
Ensure right based access to comprehensive
treatment and care of persons with mental illness through integration of the
revised District Mental Health Programme with the National Health Mission.
Ensuring uninterrupted supply of all
medicines, free of cost, in all public
health
facilities; hazardous formulations of medicines to be weeded out from the
market.
Controlling price of essential drugs by
adopting a cost-based pricing formula; minimum cost-MRP margin and removal of
all taxes on medicines in National List of Essential Medicines (NLEM); reduce
huge excise duty on medicines by reversing from MRP-based to cost-based collection.
Initiating programs to break the monopoly of
drug multinationals in critical areas.
Reviving the public sector pharmaceutical
units to harness them for production of essential drugs and vaccines.
Strictly controlling and regulating clinical
trials and prohibiting unethical
clinical
trials.
Removing US government’s drug law enforcing
agency USFDA’s offices and officials from India.
Defend India’s patent laws and ensure no
dilution.
Ensure priority for the setting up of new
colleges to train doctors and nurses by Government. Public funding of such
colleges as a priority in underserved areas such as in the north east and in
poorer States. Training institutes to be set up for health workers.
Employment
Guarantee
Enactment of a legislation for employment
guarantee in all urban areas.
200 days of work under MNREGA to be assured;
the list of permissible works under the MNREGA to be expanded to include all
activities that improve the quality of life in rural areas.
Special packages to support labour-intensive
industries in creating jobs.
Check unemployment through policies
encouraging labour intensive establishments; link financial
assistance/incentives/concessions to employers with employment generation in
the concerned establishments.
Fill up all vacant posts in government
departments; lift the ban on recruitment and 3 per cent annual surrender of
government posts; ensure the filling of all backlog posts.
Senior
Citizens & Pensions
Enabling senior citizens to live with dignity
by immediately establishing a publicly-funded, universal and non-contributory
Old Age Pension System with a minimum amount of monthly pension not less than
50 per cent of minimum wage or Rs 6,000/- per month, whichever is higher, as an
individual entitlement for all citizens of India except income tax payees or
those receiving higher pension from any other source.
Indexing the pension to consumer prices for
automatic annual revision.
Setting up a single window system for Old Age
Pensions.
Providing a similar allowance to all widows,
destitute and disabled persons with no age limit.
Building a network of old-age homes/day care
centres with State support.
Ex-Servicemen
Implement
One Rank, One Pension, in full measure Ensure the
welfare of retired central paramilitary forces personnel, widows and dependent persons, treat them on par with those
from the armed forces.
Constitute
a Commission for ex-servicemen headed by an ex-armed forces officer to address
grievances and issues of ex-servicemen.
Urban
Issues
In
view of the swelling ranks of poor and working people in India’s urban areas,
the CPI(M) is committed to:
Repeal
the mandated constitution of Special Purpose Vehicles, which bypass elected
urban bodies for urban governance; implementation of 74th Constitutional
Amendment Act and ensure the devolution of powers and finances to urban local bodies
in a time bound manner; ensure mandatory peoples’ participation for all urban
planning and budgeting process.
Framing
a New Urban Policy that replaces the concept of ‘Smart Cities’ with ‘Livable
Cities’ guided by the philosophy of inclusion and sustainability; clear
benchmarks and standards for all the urban poor and worker communities in their
cities and protection of the existing peoples’ settlements and livelihoods. The
whole mission would be channeled through local elected governments following
public consultations and discussions.
Promoting
planned urbanisation; increasing public investment in public utilities and
facilities in the cities to accommodate the growing migration by the working
people; focusing on developing middle-tier cities, so that more jobs can be
attracted to these medium cities.
Recognising
peoples’ right to water and housing and ensuring affordable basic services like
drinking water, sanitation, power, transportation, ration shops, health
facilities, schools, street lighting, etc., for the urban poor.
Running
adequately provisioned night shelters, homes and community kitchens for the
most vulnerable and destitute.
Halting
demolition of slums with a zero eviction policy; ensuring in situ development
of slums with facilities; ensuring that slum areas are not transferred to real
estate developers; providing basic services to people living in slums.
A
complete ban on uprooting and relocating workers to the outskirts of the city
far away from their place of work.
Expanding
public provisioning of housing with full civic amenities; curbing unbridled
real estate development catering to the affluent classes.
Ensuring
modern, accessible, equitable and affordable public transport and Mass Transit
Systems; planning roads and transport with greater rights for pedestrians,
cyclists and other slow moving vehicles; checking air pollution and road
congestion through these measures.
Paying
special attention to solid waste management of recyclable/reusable waste;
hazardous electronic/chemical and bio-waste through cooperatives of SWM workers
without PPP Ensuring protection for street vendors and recognising their
positive
contribution;
registration of street vendors and constitution of Town Vending Committees
(TVCs).
Environment
Making
the system and processes of Environmental Clearances at State and Central level
effective, time-bound, transparent, accountable and free of conflict of
interests.
Taking
steps to reduce emission of greenhouse gases through effective
regulation,
energy efficiency in all sectors of production and consumption; promotion of
renewable energy such as solar and wind; reducing energy inequality and
promoting energy access for economically weaker sections.
Strengthening
States to tackle natural and climate-related disasters, and to adopt and
implement climate resilient development strategies addressing the needs of
vulnerable populations.
Checking
pollution of rivers and other water bodies through effective regulation and
enforcement especially by strengthening Central and State regulatory
authorities.
Initiating
immediate measures to prevent degradation and destructive
development
on river beds and flood plains.
Water
Resources
National
Water Policy to be formulated treating water as a scarce public good, in such a
manner as to increase water re-charge and water conservation while
simultaneously enhancing water availability for domestic use, irrigation and
industry through effective regulation and demand management; equitable
provision of potable drinking water to all habitations to be accorded priority.
No
privatization of water resources and recognising the right to water.
Tackling
depletion of ground water through more effective regulation, strengthening
regulatory bodies and appropriate legislation.
Science
and Technology
Enhancing
public funding of indigenous research in science and technology to 2 per cent
of GDP; strengthening the university system in research and development;
fundamental research in the sciences to be accorded priority.
Campaign
to promote scientific temper and rational thinking as directed by our
Constitution.
Focusing
on agricultural research to break monopolies of companies such as Monsanto in
seeds.
Promoting
free software and other such new technologies, which are free
from
monopoly ownership through copyrights or patents; “knowledge commons” should be
promoted across disciplines, like biotechnology and drug discovery.
Recognise
digital infrastructure as public infrastructure and to be used for
public
good.
Surveillance and Privacy Issues
Stop
bulk surveillance by state agencies under Section 69. There should be clear
provisions and judicial supervision of any surveillance that violates citizens
privacy.
Enact
data privacy laws that protect the people against appropriation/misuse of users
private data for commercial use.
Curb
monopolies that use either telecom such as Jio/Airtel/Vodafone or internet
service platforms such as Google, Facebook, etc.
Culture and Media
All
languages listed in the Eighth Schedule of the Constitution to be equally
encouraged and developed.
Promoting
secular, progressive and democratic culture; attacks on cultural personalities
and productions by the communal forces to be firmly dealt with.
Curbing
glorification of violence and commodification of women and sex.
Strengthening
the Prasar Bharati Corporation to make it a genuine public broadcasting service
for TV and radio; states to have a say in the programmes aired by the public
broadcasting service.
Prohibiting
cross-media ownership to prevent monopolies; reversing the entry of FDI in the
print and electronic media.
Setting
up of a Media Council which can act as an independent regulatory authority for
the media.
Taking
Internet governance out of US control to an appropriate international body;
promoting a people-centric internet which builds in social justice and free
from control of global corporations; promoting a global internet regime that
protects the right to privacy and does not allow mass surveillance by either
governments.
Steps
to control the spread of fake news and act on those groups and individuals
promoting fake news.
Steps
to protect the freedom of media and stop attacks on journalists.
Provide
public support to independent media in various forms.
Amending
the Working Journalists Act to include journalists and workers from all media
organisations to ensure decent wages and job security.Constitute new wage board
for journalists in print, electronic and digital media to revise wages in media
organisations.
FOR INSTITUTIONAL REFORMS
The
CPI(M) stands for:
Protecting
individual rights and freedoms and for the review and reform of all provisions
that place unreasonable restrictions constraints on freedom of speech,
expression and individual rights.
Protecting
the independence of Statutory, Constitutional and Regulatory Bodies by ensuring
transparency in appointments to oversight, regulatory and adjudicatory bodies,
like the CVC, CBI, ECI, National/State
Human Rights Commissions, Lokpal, Lokayuktas, Womens’
Commissions, SC/ST Commissions etc., and for adopting
measures to prevent and control corruption of all kinds, especially in
high places; effectively redressing
grievances, protecting whistle blowers; making
access to justice, speedy and affordable; and reforming the electoral system.
Fighting
Corruption and Increasing Accountability
Amending and strengthening the Prevention of
Corruption Act and the Lokpal Act to widen its purview and bring all contracts,
agreements or MOUs of any kind between the government and the private sector
within its purview.
Empowering regulators and investigating
agencies to thoroughly probe corporate crimes.
Private Financial sector institutions, banking
and insurance sector in particular, and all public-private partnership projects
brought under the purview of Lokpal Act, Whistleblowers Protection Act and
other related anti-corruption legislations.
Instituting effective mechanisms for providing
protection to RTI users and anti-corruption crusaders and passing an effective
Whistleblowers Protection Act.
Strengthen the Right to Information Act and
establishing institutionalized mechanisms for citizens to participate in all
aspects of decision making in governance; implementing Section 4 of the RTI
Act, for a transparent and participatory pre-legislative process soliciting
citizen feedback before laws are passed.
Stop the misuse of the Official Secrets Act
(OSA) and reform it suitably. Judicial Reforms
Constituting a National Judicial Commission as
an independent Constitutional body comprising of representatives from
judiciary, executive, legislature and Bar for appointments, transfers and to examine
instances of commission/omission of judges and to ensure judicial
accountability.
Reforming the judicial system to provide
speedy relief at affordable cost to the common people; filling up vacancies in
the judiciary.
Suitably amending the definition of criminal
contempt in order to prevent
its misuse
in suppressing dissent.
Public declaration of their assets by the
Judges to be made mandatory.
Ensuring adequate representation and diversity
in the judiciary at all levels.
Reform of
the Election Commission
Members of the EC to be appointed by the
President on the advice of a committee consisting of the Prime Minister, the
Leader of the Opposition and Chief Justice of Supreme Court.
The Election Commissioners must be legally
debarred from enjoying any office after their retirement either under the
Government or as a Governor or member of a legislature.
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