The Hindu Editorial Vocabulary– Feb 28, 2022; Day 406
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Difficult Word/ PhraseContextual Sense
Subaltern Inferior in rank or status
Plenary attended by all participants
Outline Describe roughly or briefly or give the main points or summary of
Paradigm shift a complete and important change in the usual or accepted way of doing or thinking about somebody/something
Woo Seek someone’s favour
Fold any group or community sharing a way of life or holding the same values
Adherence Faithfully following a program, regime, party or religion
Mitigate lessen or to try to lessen the seriousness or extent of
Inequity lack of fairness; an instance of somebody being treated unfairly
Spur Incite or stimulate
Bank on base one’s hopes or confidence on something
Timidity fear of making decisions

Subaltern (Inferior in rank or status), secular: On the 85th plenary (attended by all participants) session of Congress

The Congress will have to build a campaign aligned to its new vision 

The 85th plenary session of the Congress that concluded in Raipur in Chhattisgarh outlined (Describe roughly or briefly or give the main points or summary of) a strategy for the 2024 Lok Sabha election, besides reinforcing Mallikarjun Kharge’s authority as elected president of the party. Apart from a clear expression of its willingness to work with like-minded secular parties, the Congress has resolved to pursue a sharp social justice agenda, a paradigm shift (a complete and important change in the usual or accepted way of doing or thinking about somebody/something) for a party. While the party has always had a welfare agenda, it failed to accommodate the political aspirations of the subalterns who increasingly found other parties more suitable. The party adapted a separate resolution on social justice, and promised a dedicated ministry for the empowerment of the Other Backward Classes (OBC), creation of a National Council for Social Justice, publication of an annual “State of Social Justice” report on the lines of the national Economic Survey, reservation in higher judiciary for Scheduled Castes (SC), Scheduled Tribes (ST) and OBCs and a Rohit Vemula Act for students of disadvantaged sections if elected to power. Having lost out to regional parties in the post-Mandal era, the party is now aiming to woo (Seek someone’s favour) the subalterns to its fold (any group or community sharing a way of life or holding the same values). So, as a start, it amended its own constitution to reserve half of the seats to the Congress Working Committee for SCs, STs, OBCs, women and minorities. The party’s pious declarations at the Udaipur Chintan Shivir last year were almost immediately abandoned, and it will be watched for its adherence (Faithfully following a program, regime, party or religion) to the Raipur resolutions in the coming months.

The party has promised “Sampoorna Samajik Suraksha”, a social security framework that will have legal guarantees for minimum income and social security for the poor. It also promises a universal basket of entitlements to all Indians, namely right to basic income through Nyuntam Aay Yojana (Nyay), right to health, pensions for single women, the elderly and persons with disabilities, a comprehensive Integrated Child Development Scheme in line with the National Food Security Act, and quality elementary schooling and maternity entitlements. A new welfare framework is being debated all over the world to mitigate (lessen or to try to lessen the seriousness or extent of) growing inequities (lack of fairness; an instance of somebody being treated unfairly) and other challenges such as unemployment and underemployment, and the Congress’s ideas should spur (Incite or stimulate) a fresh, informed debate in India. Though the party had banked on (base one’s hopes or confidence on something) NYAY or a universal income scheme before the 2019 general election, it did not gain any electoral dividends. The party now hopes that the promise of a better future with assured income, which also accounts for social identity, could counter the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)’s Hindutva plus. By acknowledging the fact that inequality is not merely material, and discrimination is not only along religious lines, the Congress has taken the debate beyond the secular-communal binary that has worked to the BJP’s advantage in recent years. For this strategy to be successful, the Congress will have to build a robust political campaign aligned to its new thinking, breaking away from its characteristic timidity (fear of making decisions).

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