"The chief qualification of a mass leader is an unending infallibility, wherein he can never admit an error"
In mass politics, a leader’s greatest asset isn’t a resume or honesty; it is the illusion of being never wrong.
This "infallibility" is maintained through emotional theatrics that bypass logic.
When a leader plays the "emotional card," he reinforces his image as the sole champion of the people. Even when he fails to deliver, the blame is shifted to the "apathy of others", never his own lack of will.
This dynamic was on full display during the "Grand Apology" to the mothers of the nation by the Supreme Leader.
While the speech was emotional enough to make Machiavelli squirm in his grave, it highlighted a glaring contradiction: a leader with the authority to enact immediate change chose a scripted and teleprompted monologue over executive action.
In September 2023, the Women’s Reservation Act was sold as a historic victory. Yet, by tying it to a future census and a complex delimitation process, the government essentially promised a meal that can’t be served until the kitchen is built and the crops are grown.
Why fix the problem today when you can use the promise as a campaign slogan for the next decade?
The irony is thick. As the head of the world’s largest political party, the Leader doesn’t need a new law to empower women.
If gender equality were a priority, he could simply issue an internal memo mandating that 50% of his party’s candidates be women. No census required.
Despite governing 18 states and frequently praising "Shakti," the actual seats of power in these states remain a patriarchal fortress.
If his commitment were as genuine as his "emotive monologue" suggests, he could replace six male Chief Ministers with women today.
Instead, the political "brotherhood" remains untouched while women are offered apologies instead of offices.
There is a fundamental irony in a leader with an absolute majority acting as though his hands are tied.
He possesses the legislative muscle to restructure power, yet he portrays himself as a victim of the opposition's "anti-women politics" never willing to admit that it was his government which put the Law in question in limbo.
In 2023, he called the bill an "immortal moment." By 2026, he is trying to recreate that same energy.
The reality is simple: Women’s reservation is already the law of the land; it is simply being held hostage by the very government that passed it.
Ultimately, the "Grand Apology" isn't about giving women a seat at the table, but about making sure they stay in the hallway, waiting for a "vision" that never arrives, while the emotional card is played through monologue of Grand Apology.
