Saturday, 25 April 2026
The Hindu — Important News Articles & Editorial Analysis
Raman Academy · Shimla · Edition: International
Today's Coverage
1Meta 'automatically' blocks govt.-flagged content in India — Sahyog portal & Safe HarbourGovernance 2'Constructive' India-U.S. trade deal talks held in WashingtonIR + Economy 3The crisis of urban electoral disenfranchisementPolity 4CAFE-III: Emissions can be curbed only through electrification, not incremental changeEnvironment 5Net FDI hits 45-month high in February 2026, breaks six-month 'jinx'Economy 6Editorial: The moral eclipse of politics in the modern ageEthics (GS IV)Page 01GS II · Governance
Meta 'Automatically' Blocks Govt.-Flagged Content in India
Meta (Facebook and Instagram) has begun deploying automated systems to restrict content at scale in India following government notices — placing India among a select few countries where such automatic compliance operates. The trigger: a February 2026 amendment to the IT Rules slashed the compliance window for platforms from 36 hours to just three hours, making human case-by-case review practically impossible.
1. Legal Framework — Section 79 and "Safe Harbour"
Safe Harbour (Section 79, IT Act 2000): Social media platforms enjoy legal immunity from liability for user-generated content, provided they act as "neutral intermediaries."
Section 79(3)(b) — The Catch: If a platform receives "actual knowledge" of unlawful content (via a court order or government notice) and fails to remove it "expeditiously," it loses this immunity and becomes liable.
The Three-Hour Dilemma: By compressing the compliance window from 36 hours to just 3 hours, the February 2026 amendment has made meaningful human review nearly impossible — forcing Meta to automate takedowns to retain its legal shield.
2. The Sahyog Portal — A Streamlined But Controversial Tool
What it does: Developed by the Ministry of Home Affairs, the Sahyog portal allows authorized police and government officials across India to send digital takedown notices directly to platforms — essentially a one-click censorship system.
The Section 69A Gap: Unlike Section 69A (which involves a centralized government committee, specific national security justifications, and procedural safeguards), the Sahyog portal operates under Section 79(3)(b). Critics argue this creates a "parallel mechanism" for content removal that bypasses judicial or rigorous administrative scrutiny.
Irreversibility: Once content is blocked via these notices, Meta reportedly refuses to restore it without an explicit "unblocking order" from the government — making the censorship practically permanent and one-directional.
3. Industry Response — Meta vs. X (Twitter)
| Platform | Approach | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Meta (Facebook/Instagram) | High compliance, automated systems, "safety-first" legal posture | Prioritizes retaining Safe Harbour immunity over user rights evaluation; fears litigation cost. |
| X (formerly Twitter) | Challenging Sahyog portal in Karnataka High Court | Argues police notices must meet the "unlawful content" standards set by the Supreme Court in the Shreya Singhal case. |
4. Critical Issues — Free Speech vs. Governance
| Issue | Impact / Concern |
|---|---|
| Freedom of Speech | Automated blocking may cause "over-compliance" — removing lawful dissent, satire, or journalism to avoid legal risk. |
| Due Process | Shift from court "orders" to executive "notices" via an online form lowers the threshold for state-sponsored content removal drastically. |
| Big Tech Power | Decisions on what Indian citizens can read are made by private algorithms responding to executive pressure — with little transparency or appeal mechanism. |
| Safe Harbour Doctrine | The 3-hour window effectively forces platforms to "act first, ask questions later" — fundamentally altering the "neutral intermediary" principle that Safe Harbour was built on. |
India Angle
- The Shreya Singhal case (2015) established that content can only be restricted under Section 66A-equivalent standards — the Sahyog portal potentially bypasses this standard by operating under administrative notice rather than judicial order.
- India's Digital Personal Data Protection Act (2023) and the proposed amendments to IT Rules are pulling in contradictory directions — protecting data privacy while simultaneously enabling bulk content suppression.
- The "chilling effect" — where self-censorship increases out of fear of automated takedowns — poses a greater long-term threat to free expression than any single blocked post.
The automation of government-flagged content removal marks a significant turning point in India's digital governance. While the government justifies these measures to curb deepfakes, misinformation, and threats to public order, the lack of transparency and the bypass of traditional legal safeguards raise serious "chilling effect" concerns. For a healthy democracy, "Safe Harbour" must not become a tool for "Safe Censorship."
Prelims Practice
The term "actual knowledge" in the context of intermediary liability (Section 79, IT Act) refers to:
Answer: C) Notification via court order or government-authorized agency
Mains Practice
"The shift from judicial orders to executive notices in content regulation raises concerns about due process." Critically examine with reference to the Sahyog portal and intermediary liability. (150 Words)
Page 05GS II & III · IR + Economy
'Constructive' Trade Deal Talks Held with U.S.: India
In the first in-person meeting since October 2025, Indian and U.S. negotiators met in Washington from April 20–23, 2026 to salvage a trade deal that hit a major legal roadblock. A planned Interim Agreement for March 2026 was delayed after the U.S. Supreme Court invalidated certain reciprocal tariffs imposed by the Trump administration. Despite this, both nations describe the talks as "constructive" — with the target of a Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA) firmly in view.
1. The Legal Hurdle — U.S. Supreme Court Ruling
The Ruling: In February 2026, the U.S. Supreme Court invalidated tariffs levied under emergency economic powers, declaring them unauthorized — creating a legal vacuum in the reciprocal tariff framework both nations had agreed on February 7, 2026.
The Refund Factor: The U.S. opened a $166 billion refund window for past duties. India is now negotiating from a position seeking a "better tariff regime" and clarity on how its exporters will be treated under new U.S. legislation going forward.
Energy Signal: The U.S. recently reduced penal tariffs on India for buying Russian oil from 25% to 18% — signaling willingness to accommodate India's strategic autonomy in energy in exchange for trade concessions.
2. Scope of the Interim Agreement
| Area | India's Position | U.S. Position |
|---|---|---|
| Market Access | Preferential access for apparel, leather, and seafood exports | Preferential access for agricultural and tech products |
| Digital Trade | Data localization requirements — non-negotiable domestic priority | Wants open data flows as part of BTA framework |
| GSP Restoration | Restoration of Generalised System of Preferences (revoked in 2019) | Conditional on broader market opening concessions |
| Economic Security | "Pax Silica" — critical mineral supply chain alignment | Securing supply chains away from China dependence |
3. Strategic Context — The "Shaky Wicket"
Diplomatic Pressure: Senior BJP leader Ram Madhav described the India-U.S. relationship as being on a "shaky wicket" due to trade frictions — rare candor about bilateral tensions.
Upcoming Milestone: The visit of U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio to India in May 2026 is treated as the de facto deadline for closing at least the Interim Agreement.
Trade Diversion Strategy: India is simultaneously finalising deals with the UK, Oman, and New Zealand — deliberately reducing over-dependence on any single market and strengthening its negotiating leverage with Washington.
4. Critical Issues for Aspirants
| Area of Concern | Strategic Implication |
|---|---|
| Trade Diversion | Multi-track FTA strategy (UK, Oman, New Zealand) reduces vulnerability to U.S. bargaining pressure. |
| Legal Sovereignty | The U.S. court ruling shows how domestic judicial shifts in partner nations can derail signed executive agreements — a lesson for India's own FTA design. |
| GSP Benefits | GSP restoration remains India's key demand — its revocation in 2019 cost Indian exporters an estimated $5.6 billion annually in tariff benefits. |
| Digital Protectionism | U.S. pressure on data flows directly conflicts with India's DPDP Act (2023) — a fundamental sovereignty-vs-globalisation tension in the BTA. |
India Angle
- The U.S. is India's largest trade partner ($150+ billion bilateral trade) — a successful BTA could significantly boost India's export competitiveness in manufacturing and IT services.
- The "reciprocity" framing cuts both ways: India's agricultural sensitivities (dairy, poultry) and the U.S.'s tech market access demands represent genuine red lines that cannot both be fully satisfied.
- For India, this deal is as much about geopolitical positioning (supply chain decoupling from China) as it is about tariffs — the "Pax Silica" critical minerals initiative reflects the deeper strategic logic.
The April 2026 talks signify a "recalibration" of the India-U.S. economic partnership. Geopolitical alignment is currently outweighing trade protectionism — but India's success in this deal ultimately depends on ensuring that "reciprocity" does not hollow out domestic manufacturing or compromise agricultural sovereignty. The Secretary Rubio visit in May 2026 is the moment of truth.
Prelims Practice
The "Generalised System of Preferences (GSP)" refers to:
Answer: B) Preferential tariff treatment granted by developed countries to developing countries
Mains Practice
India's pursuit of a Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA) with the United States must balance strategic alignment with economic self-interest. Critically examine. (150 Words)
Page 06GS II · Indian Polity
The Crisis of Urban Electoral Disenfranchisement
Despite the constitutional promise of "one person, one vote," millions of urban Indians — primarily migrants, slum-dwellers, the urban poor, and religious minorities — are being systematically removed from electoral rolls through the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) process. The result is a "selective filtration" of the electorate that is creating what the article calls a "propertied democracy" — one that excludes the very people who build and sustain urban India.
1. The Mechanics of Exclusion — SIR and Bureaucracy
Documentation Hurdles: The SIR process requires rigid proof of stable residence and historical documentation (dating back to 2002/2005). For India's highly mobile migrant workforce — which may constitute 40% of urban populations — this is an insurmountable barrier.
"Gatekeeper" Mentality: Instead of proactive voter registration outreach, enumeration processes prioritize administrative convenience over universal suffrage — a structural inversion of democratic responsibility.
The T.N. Seshan Precedent: Former Chief Election Commissioner Seshan established that "an address does not mean a luxury home" — even a pavement or tree can constitute a valid address for voter registration. Current SIR systems have effectively reversed this principle.
2. Statistical Evidence — The Scale of Deletions (2025-26)
| City | Scale of Deletion | Targeted Demographic |
|---|---|---|
| Mumbai | 14 lakh names deleted; only 50% of informal housing residents registered | Slum dwellers, migrants |
| Lucknow | 30.88% of voter names removed | Urban poor, unorganised labour |
| Ghaziabad | 36.67% of voter names removed | Highly mobile industrial workforce |
| Kanpur | 25.62% of voter names removed | Unorganised sector workers |
| Patna | 16.5 lakh names removed from draft rolls | Marginalised and ethnic minorities |
| Kolkata (Gulshan Colony) | 90% of voters found missing | Religious and social minorities |
3. The "Dual Burden" — Vulnerable Groups
Double Disadvantage: Dalits, religious minorities, and the urban poor face a two-fold burden — they struggle to register for the first time due to documentation gaps, and face the highest incidence of deletion if they are already registered.
The Voting Rights-Property Nexus: With 40% of India's urban population living in slums, rigid residency-based documentation requirements effectively convert the right to vote into a privilege of formal housing tenure.
4. Technological Risk — The End of Ballot Secrecy
Booth-wise Data: The current EVM system allows parties to see voting patterns at the booth level (often just a few hundred people). In dense urban slum clusters, this effectively compromises the secret ballot.
Post-Election Retribution: Marginalized communities become vulnerable to post-election neglect or active retribution if their voting pattern can be inferred — converting the ballot from a shield into a target.
5. Critical Implications for Democracy
| Issue | Impact on Democracy |
|---|---|
| Universal Franchise | When 40% of the urban population lives in slums and faces systematic exclusion, the "representative" nature of Parliament is fundamentally compromised. |
| Migrant Rights | Lack of "portable voting" or flexible residency requirements strips internal migrants of political agency — a growing constitutional lacuna as urbanisation accelerates. |
| Social Justice | Disenfranchisement functions as a structural tool to keep the working class away from the policy-making table — widening the gap between those who shape policy and those who suffer its consequences. |
India Angle
- Dr. B.R. Ambedkar designed universal adult franchise precisely as the great equaliser — a tool for the poorest to hold the most powerful accountable. SIR-based deletions systematically undermine this foundational design.
- "Portable voting" — allowing migrants to vote from their current location rather than their registered hometown — is technically feasible via Aadhaar-linked rolls but has seen limited political will for implementation.
- The Election Commission of India's credibility as a constitutional body rests on its role as a facilitator of inclusion, not a gatekeeper of convenience — a distinction its SIR protocols have blurred.
Urban electoral disenfranchisement is not an administrative lapse — it is a systematic erosion of the democratic base. By linking the right to vote to rigid property and residency documentation, the state is creating a "propertied democracy" that excludes the very people who build urban India. Restoring Dr. Ambedkar's vision requires a shift from exclusive enumeration to inclusive facilitation, ensuring the "pavement dweller" has as much say in the nation's future as the "bungalow resident."
Prelims Practice
The principle of "Universal Adult Suffrage" in India implies:
Answer: B) Voting rights for all citizens above a certain age without discrimination
Mains Practice
Critically analyze the role of administrative processes, such as Special Intensive Revision (SIR), in shaping electoral inclusion and exclusion in India. (150 Words)
Page 06GS III · Environment
Incremental Change: Emissions Can Be Significantly Curbed Only Through Electrification
In April 2026, the Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) and Indian automakers reached a consensus on CAFE-III (Corporate Average Fuel Efficiency Phase III) standards. On paper, the targets appear ambitious — reducing vehicle CO2 emissions from 113 g/km to 77 g/km by 2032. In reality, critics argue the framework is riddled with "compliance pathways" that allow manufacturers to delay a genuine transition to Electric Vehicles (EVs), managing emissions on paper while fossil fuels continue to dominate roads.
1. CAFE-III vs. CAFE-II — The Targets
CAFE-II Target: 113 g CO2/km. CAFE-III Target: 77 g CO2/km by March 2032 — a 32% reduction over five years (April 2027 to March 2032).
The Small Car Controversy Resolution: Earlier proposals included a "carve-out" for small cars (favouring Maruti Suzuki, which dominates 14–15% of vehicle sales in the small car segment). The explicit carve-out has been removed — creating a uniform standard. However, critics say the result is "incrementally better" rather than transformative.
2. "Alternative Compliance" — The Escape Hatches
| Mechanism | How It Works | Problem |
|---|---|---|
| Marginal Tech Credits | Credits for start-stop systems, regenerative braking, and tire pressure monitoring | These are incremental ICE improvements, not genuine decarbonisation. |
| Ethanol Pathways | Heavy incentives for E85-compatible vehicles | Allows ICE technology to persist longer — keeps fossil fuel infrastructure dominant. |
| Super-Credits | A single BEV counts as three vehicles for compliance | A manufacturer can sell hundreds of high-emission SUVs for every few EVs and still "comply." |
| Averaging and Banking | Compliance assessed over three-year blocks; companies can trade surplus credits | Laggards can simply "buy" compliance, weakening aggregate emission reduction. |
3. Impact on Decarbonisation
Sectoral Importance: Transport is India's third-largest source of greenhouse gas emissions — after energy and agriculture. CAFE standards are the primary regulatory lever for this sector.
Energy Security Link: Reliance on incremental ICE improvements keeps India tethered to fossil fuel price volatility, whereas aggressive electrification aligns directly with national energy security and macroeconomic stability given 2026's oil price surge to $120/barrel.
Technological Lock-in Risk: By incentivising ethanol blending and mild hybrids, India risks creating path dependency — where legacy ICE infrastructure (fuel stations, spare parts ecosystems, manufacturing lines) remains dominant long after the window for cost-effective electrification closes.
4. Critical Issues
| Feature | Strategic Concern |
|---|---|
| Regulatory Signaling | Weak, flexible regulations fail to provide the "sharp signal" manufacturers need for long-term EV manufacturing capital investment decisions. |
| Technological Lock-in | Ethanol and mild hybrid incentives delay the EV ecosystem — charging infrastructure, battery manufacturing, and skilled workforce development. |
| Market Fairness | Credit trading creates a secondary market where EV leaders profit from selling credits to laggards without reducing aggregate national emissions. |
India Angle
- India's Net Zero 2070 target requires a transport sector transformation that CAFE-III's "incremental" framework is unlikely to deliver — the policy signal must be sharper and the timeline front-loaded.
- The PLI scheme for Advanced Chemistry Cells (batteries) and the EV-30@30 target (30% EV penetration by 2030) are structurally misaligned with a CAFE-III framework that allows ICE manufacturers easy compliance through credit trading.
- India's oil import bill ($160+ billion/year) is a direct national security and balance-of-payments vulnerability — aggressive EV transition is as much an economic imperative as an environmental one.
CAFE-III marks a step forward by eliminating segment-specific biases, but it remains a framework of "incremental change" in an era that demands a "structural shift." Multiple escape hatches — ethanol credits, super-credits, three-year averaging — risk managing emissions on paper while fossil fuels continue to dominate India's roads. For Net Zero 2070, the transition to electrification must be driven by sharper, non-negotiable mandates rather than flexible, credit-heavy accounting.
Prelims Practice
The term "super-credits" in vehicle emission regulations refers to:
Answer: B) Counting low-emission vehicles multiple times for compliance purposes
Mains Practice
Discuss how "alternative compliance mechanisms" such as credit trading and super-credits can dilute the effectiveness of environmental regulations. (150 Words)
Page 10 (Page 11 in PDF)GS III · Indian Economy
Net FDI Hits 45-Month High in February 2026, Breaks Six-Month 'Jinx'
In February 2026, India's net Foreign Direct Investment hit a 45-month high of $4.6 billion — breaking a six-month streak of negative or stagnant growth. This recovery reflects a "double-positive" dynamic: gross inflows surged by 61.6% to nearly $9 billion (a seven-month high), while total outflows fell to a 27-month low of $4.4 billion. Crucially, foreign firms are choosing to reinvest profits within India rather than repatriate them.
1. Decoding the Data — Inflows vs. Outflows
Gross Inflows (The Surge)
$9 Bn
+61.6% — 7-month high
Signals renewed global investor confidence
Signals renewed global investor confidence
Total Outflows (The Contraction)
$4.4 Bn
27-month low
Repatriation fell 30% YoY to $1.7 Bn
Repatriation fell 30% YoY to $1.7 Bn
Repatriation Signal: Foreign firms repatriated only $1.7 billion in February 2026 — roughly one-third of January's figure and 30% lower year-on-year. This indicates firms are finding better returns within India than by exiting to other markets.
Outward FDI: Indian companies also reduced overseas investments by 30.4% in February 2026, focusing more on domestic expansion — a sign of rising confidence in the domestic growth story.
2. Sectoral and Geographic Trends
| Category | Detail |
|---|---|
| Key Sectors | Manufacturing, computer services, financial services, and communication services — together accounting for over 66% of total equity inflows, validating the PLI scheme strategy. |
| Top Source Countries | Singapore, the U.S., Mauritius, Japan, and the Netherlands — contributing roughly 75% of total inflows. Singapore alone accounts for a quarter of FDI flows (often the routing hub for U.S. and Japanese capital). |
| FY26 Total (Apr–Feb) | Gross FDI stood at $88.3 billion — an 18.1% growth over the same period of FY25, the highest 11-month tally in several years. |
3. The "Greenfield" Paradox
RBI's Optimistic View: The central bank asserts India remains a top destination for Greenfield FDI (entirely new factories, facilities, and projects).
The Reality Check: Data from fDi Markets shows greenfield project announcements actually fell 11% (to $65 billion) between April 2025 and January 2026 — suggesting existing sectors are attracting reinvestment capital, but the pace of genuinely new large-scale project commitments has slowed.
4. Critical Implications
| Feature | Significance |
|---|---|
| Balance of Payments (BoP) | Strong net FDI provides a stable cushion for the Capital Account, helping offset the Current Account Deficit (CAD) and supporting the Rupee — crucial given the record low of Rs 95.22/USD in March 2026. |
| Quality of Capital | Unlike FPI ("hot money" that can exit within hours), FDI represents long-term commitment to Indian infrastructure and jobs — far more valuable for macroeconomic stability. |
| Manufacturing Push | Manufacturing dominance in the FDI mix suggests PLI (Production Linked Incentive) schemes are successfully attracting foreign equity into target sectors. |
| Repatriation Trends | The sharp fall in disinvestment (exit capital) indicates the "exit phase" seen in late 2025 has stabilised — global firms now find better risk-adjusted yields within India. |
India Angle
- The 45-month high in net FDI validates India's macro resilience narrative — but the slight cooling in greenfield announcements is a reminder that investor confidence in the long-term story must be sustained through predictable policy and Ease of Doing Business improvements.
- The dominance of Singapore as a routing hub (reflecting U.S. and Japanese capital) is a double-edged signal — it shows global confidence but also reveals that India's FDI quality data may overstate the geographic diversity of real investors.
- Strong FDI directly supports the Rupee at a time when the currency is under structural pressure from high oil prices and a large current account deficit — making it a macroeconomic stabiliser beyond just its investment value.
The 45-month high in net FDI is a robust signal of macroeconomic resilience — reaffirming India's position as a preferred destination for global capital amidst geopolitical uncertainty. However, the slight dip in greenfield announcements reminds the government that sustaining this momentum requires continued improvements in Ease of Doing Business and policy stability, ensuring that the surge in capital translates into long-term industrial capacity rather than just financial flows.
Mains Practice
Discuss the significance of Foreign Direct Investment in stabilising India's Balance of Payments. How does FDI differ from Foreign Portfolio Investment (FPI)? (250 Words)
Page 06 · Editorial AnalysisGS IV · Ethics, Integrity & Aptitude
EDITORIAL · GS PAPER IV
The Moral Eclipse of Politics in the Modern Age
Aristotle grounded politics in ethics — the polis (state) exists not merely to secure bare life but to enable a flourishing civil society where human potential is realised. When political authority is divorced from this ethical purpose, it collapses into what the author calls a "system of domination." This editorial argues that modern politics is undergoing precisely such a "moral eclipse" — replacing genuine legitimacy with political expediency, technological detachment in warfare, and the trivialisation of ethical critique.
1. The Appropriation of Moral Authority
The Pope vs. Trump Dilemma: When moral leaders (like Pope Leo XIV) intervene for peace or restraint, they are dismissed as "naive" or as naive political interference. This signals a world where moral authority and political power operate in entirely separate spheres — to the detriment of governance.
"Sacred Camouflage": Politicians increasingly use spiritual language and imagery to shield themselves from ethical scrutiny — not as genuine moral grounding, but as defensive political strategy. This substitution of moral language for moral substance is itself a marker of the eclipse.
Substitution of Ethics: Morality has not vanished from politics — it has been replaced by a "politics of expediency" where rhetoric denounces elitism while the concentration of power and wealth continues unabated.
2. Dehumanisation and the Ethics of War
War as Epistemic Failure: War represents the ultimate moral collapse — a breakdown in the human capacity to recognise the "other" as a being with equal dignity and moral standing.
| Dimension | Ancient Warfare (Hellenic) | Modern Warfare (Baudrillard) |
|---|---|---|
| Moral Proximity | Face-to-face combat created moments of mutual recognition, shared grief, even mercy | Technological removal (drones, high-altitude bombing) turns humans into "disembodied data points" |
| Language of Suffering | War's horror was visible and direct — experienced by combatants as a shared human tragedy | Political language frames mass civilian deaths as "collateral damage" — removing empathy from the equation |
| Accountability | Warriors faced the moral and physical consequences of their choices | Drone operators, algorithm designers, and decision-makers operate at moral distance from consequences |
3. Philosophical Frameworks of Justice
John Rawls — "Veil of Ignorance"
A just society can only be designed if we reason without knowing our own position in it — our wealth, race, or power. Modern politics fails this test entirely: it is built on preserving the privileges of identity and advantage rather than designing for universal fairness.
Bertrand Russell — Primal Impulses
Humans are fundamentally driven by acquisitiveness, rivalry, vanity, and an insatiable desire for power. Without robust ethical norms and institutions, these impulses produce precisely the oppressive political order we observe today.
Historical Precedents — Moral Clarity Sacrificed
From the assassination of Julius Caesar (where the lofty defense of liberty produced civil war) to Hiroshima and Nagasaki (where industrialised states rationalised mass civilian death as "military necessity"), history demonstrates that "moral clarity" is almost always the first casualty of "political calculation."
4. Critical Concepts for Ethics Paper
| Concept | Relevance to Ethics & Governance |
|---|---|
| Ethical Telos | The purpose of the state should be the "good life" for all — not the survival of the state or the perpetuation of a leader's power. Public servants must internalise this as their foundational purpose. |
| Crisis of Legitimacy | When power lacks genuine moral grounding, it relies on "spectacle" and "viral outrage" rather than truth and deliberation. This is the governance crisis of our time. |
| Technological Removal | In AI-assisted governance and cyber-warfare, the "moral distance" between decision and consequence is growing — a challenge that requires new ethical frameworks for public administration. |
| Crisis of Empathy | The inability to recognise the "other" as equally human leads to the marginalisation of minorities and the justification of violence in democratic rhetoric — a failure of both ethics and governance. |
GS IV Angle — Ethics in Governance
- The editorial directly addresses the ethics of public service: if those in power cannot empathise with the governed — recognising them as full human beings — governance becomes mere domination, not administration.
- The "Veil of Ignorance" test is a practical tool for policy design: would you support a policy on migrant workers' rights if you didn't know whether you were the migrant or the employer? This is the test of genuine ethical governance.
- The article's challenge to "rote obedience" resonates with the civil servant's duty — following orders must never displace moral imagination. The ethical bureaucrat must ask not just "is this legal?" but "is this just?"
The "moral eclipse" of politics signals a movement from a society seeking justice to one seeking purely the exercise of power. For politics to survive as a meaningful human endeavour, it must be reconstituted on its deepest ethical foundations — moving from spectacle toward deliberation, from "rote obedience" toward critical moral imagination. The interventions of moral leaders are not anachronistic; they are the last bulwark against a political order where power becomes its own justification and ethics becomes an optional ornament.
Mains Practice
Empathy is central to ethical governance, yet it is increasingly absent in modern political discourse. Analyse with suitable examples. (150 Words)
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