When Tony Abbott arrived in India's booming financial megalopolis of
Mumbai on Thursday, his two-day visit coincided with two minor milestones.
There is his
own one-year anniversary that formally ticks over on Sunday and the first 100
days of India's new government, led by the conservative-nationalist prime
minister, Narendra Modi.
Both markers
have brought a welter of commentary as leaders are assessed against that
cruellest of benchmarks, the expectations they themselves created. And what a
contrast they reveal.
On
Wednesday, an opinion poll showed Modi is doing somewhat better early on than
his Australian counterpart. The 14-city survey by Network 18 and Today's
Chanakya found people surveyed were onside with government plans to
reshape and modernise India's vast yet stultifyingly bureaucratic economy.
In fact,a
third of voters said they wanted the new government to be bolder still and
nearly two thirds approved of the new government's performance.
Half of
those surveyed thought the government would improve its position if an election
were held now, whereas just one in five disapproved.
The
Economic Times said the poll "showed Modi has been successful in
building a direct rapport with the people".
The contrast in
the respective political fortunes of Abbott and Modi, is starkest in the
goodwill being extended by Indian voters to the Modi program as against the
trust problem for the coalition in Australia.
Yes, the two
milestones are different. Governments with just three months on the clock have
hardly had time to get things wrong and usually there is a post-election
honeymoon. So Modi could yet go backwards in his first year.
But even by
the 100-day mark, Abbott was behind the freshly ousted opposition according to
both the Fairfax-Nielsen and Newspoll surveys. Mostly it was issues of
management – or a lack of it.
First there
was the entitlements furore for MPs that dominated the early weeks, with no
decisive management by the new prime minister. There was also the Indonesian
spying allegations – not Abbott's fault but his to manage; the vetoed
GrainCorp takeover that was politically tricky; a curious and self-inflicted
education funding wobble; and both Qantas and Holden faced crises that
engulfed the government for a time. Since then, the problems have been
mostly associated with the budget.
Of
necessity, Modi's reform agenda is ambitious, yet his popularity remains high.
He has been helped in this regard by the timidity of previous governments,
meaning there are some obvious levers to pull and a pent up mood for change in
the electorate.
Dismantling
centrally planned agricultural policy directing what food is grown, and how it
is priced and distributed, is an example of change that is long overdue. Indian
voters have so far embraced the promise of greater economic efficiency and
lower prices. Ditto for transport reform.
Modi's
recent boast that India is open for foreign business having replaced red tape
with red carpet seemed almost Abbott-esque.
Energy
policy is another great challenge, which brings us back to Abbott's visit. The
tangible - yet officially unconfirmed - mission here is commercial - to sign an
inter-country safe-guards agreement removing the last impediments to Australian
uranium sales to India. Insiders say it could also to facilitate direct Indian
investment in what might otherwise be marginal uranium mines in Australia.
The trade is
something John Howard wanted and Julia Gillard got moving on decisively in
2012. And it is a circle the pro-nuclear Abbott is more than happy to square
notwithstanding India's refusal to sign the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
For Abbott
and Modi, whose popularity is also tied up in nationalism, the uranium
agreement fits a broader narrative. Modi just returned from a five-day visit to
Japan for talks with Abbott's close ally, Shinzo Abe.
Just as Abe
is leading a revival in national morale in Japan allied to a sweeping reform
program, Modi is asserting a new Indian pride based on modernisation. Both want
the strength and national confidence to stare down China. Stitching up the
uranium deal with Australia ticks all of those boxes being both economic and
strategic.
After
building his own close ties with Abe, Abbott is building another alliance with
Modi. It is consistent with his refrain that he wants to strengthen all
regional friendships. Beijing is watching this process closely.
While
Washington strenuously denies its so-called Asia-Pacific "pivot" is
part of a China containment strategy, Abbott's foreign policy activism suggests
he has no compunction in overtly encouraging economic development,
self-reliance, free trade, and muscular independence in the countries with whom
Australia feels most comfortable.
When
he nominated Japan as Australia's best friend in Asia, it was on the basis
of its westernised liberal-democratic values – the contradistinction with China
was left unsaid.
One imagines
the same logic is underpinning the new bilateral relationship Abbott wants to
forge with India. And that's the other milestone in this Indian foray. Abbott's
state visit to New Delhi on Friday will be Modi's first as host.
Mark Kenny is Fairfax Media's chief political
correspondent.Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-opinion/bringing-india-into-australias-nuclear-family-20140904-10c655.html#ixzz3COAJ2fZs
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