Dalit
Politics Must Learn from Dr. B. R. Ambedkar and Adopt a New Radical Agenda
SR
Darapuri National President, All India Peoples Front
Introduction,,
The trajectory of Dalit politics in
post-independence India presents a paradox. On the one hand, Dalits have
achieved unprecedented political visibility, constitutional safeguards,
educational advancement, and representation in public institutions due to the
struggles led by Dr. B. R. Ambedkar and subsequent social movements. On the
other hand, caste oppression, social exclusion, economic deprivation, and
violence against Dalits continue in deeply entrenched and evolving forms. This
contradiction raises serious questions regarding the direction, limitations,
and future of contemporary Dalit politics.
The need of the present historical moment is
to critically revisit the ideological foundations of Ambedkarite politics and
reconstruct a new radical agenda capable of confronting both traditional caste
oppression and the emerging forms of economic and political domination in
neoliberal India. Such a reorientation requires going beyond symbolic
representation and electoral arithmetic toward a transformative politics rooted
in social justice, economic democracy, constitutional morality, and human
dignity.
Ambedkar’s
Radical Understanding of Caste
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar understood caste not merely
as a social prejudice or discriminatory practice but as a comprehensive system
of graded inequality embedded within the social, religious, economic, and
political structure of Indian society. Unlike reformers who viewed caste as a
moral aberration that could be corrected through appeals to social harmony,
Ambedkar recognized caste as a structural mechanism of domination sustained by
religious sanction and material interests.
Ambedkar’s historic work Annihilation of
Caste remains one of the most radical critiques of the Hindu social order.
He argued that caste destroys fraternity, denies equality, and obstructs
democracy. According to him, political democracy could not survive unless
accompanied by social and economic democracy. His vision was therefore
revolutionary in character, aiming not at reforming caste hierarchy but at
dismantling it altogether.
Ambedkar’s political philosophy rested upon
three foundational principles: liberty, equality, and fraternity. These values,
derived partly from Buddhism and modern democratic thought, constituted the
ethical basis of his emancipatory politics. His struggle was not merely for
Dalit representation but for the reconstruction of Indian society itself.
Transformation
of Dalit Politics After Ambedkar
After Ambedkar’s death, Dalit politics entered
a new phase. The constitutional framework created opportunities for
reservations, political participation, and social mobility. Several Dalit
political organizations and parties emerged, most notably the Dalit Panthers
and later the Bahujan movement. These developments played a significant role in
generating political consciousness among marginalized communities.
However, over time, a large section of Dalit
politics became increasingly electoral and accommodationist. Radical social
transformation was gradually replaced by identity-based power sharing within
the existing political order. Political success began to be measured largely in
terms of seats won, ministries acquired, or symbolic gestures of recognition.
This shift produced several contradictions:
The
ideological depth of Ambedkarite politics weakened. Mass movements declined in
strength. Political fragmentation among Dalit sub-castes increased. Dependence
on dominant political parties grew. Economic issues affecting Dalits received
insufficient attention. Structural critique of caste capitalism diminished.
As a consequence, Dalit politics often
remained confined within parliamentary calculations without substantially
challenging the broader structures of inequality and exclusion.
Neoliberalism
and the Changing Nature of Oppression
The emergence of neoliberal economic policies
since the 1990s has transformed the social and economic landscape of India.
Privatization, contractual labour, weakening of labour protections, reduction
in public sector employment, and growing corporate concentration have
disproportionately harmed marginalized communities, including Dalits.
Reservations in government employment have
limited relevance when public employment itself is shrinking. Simultaneously,
unequal access to education, digital resources, capital, and social networks
continues to exclude Dalits from emerging economic opportunities.
Moreover, caste discrimination has adapted
itself to modern institutions. Educational campuses, corporate workplaces,
media institutions, housing markets, and digital spaces increasingly reproduce
subtle as well as overt forms of caste exclusion. Violence against Dalits also
continues, especially when they assert land rights, political autonomy, or
social dignity.
Therefore, contemporary Dalit politics cannot
rely solely upon the old framework of representation. It must develop a broader
critique of caste capitalism and economic inequality.
Need for a
New Radical Agenda
Reclaiming
the Agenda of Social Transformation
Dalit politics must recover Ambedkar’s
original emphasis on social transformation rather than mere political
accommodation. The struggle against caste hierarchy should once again become
central to public discourse. This requires ideological mobilization, grassroots
activism, and cultural intervention.
The normalization of caste privilege in
everyday life must be challenged through educational campaigns, social reform
movements, and democratization of public institutions. Dalit politics must
engage not only with state power but also with social consciousness.
Economic
Democracy and Redistribution
Ambedkar consistently emphasized the
importance of economic justice. In his writings on state socialism and labour
welfare, he advocated strong state intervention to prevent concentration of
wealth and protect vulnerable communities.
A renewed Dalit agenda must therefore include:
Land
redistribution and agrarian reform, Universal access to quality education and
healthcare, Employment guarantees and labour protections, Expansion of
reservations into the private sector, Urban housing rights, Regulation of
corporate monopolies and Social security for informal workers
Without economic democratization, formal
political rights remain incomplete.
Building
Broad Democratic Alliances
Ambedkar understood that oppressed communities
could not achieve liberation in isolation. Contemporary Dalit politics must
therefore build principled alliances with Adivasis, Other Backward Classes,
minorities, workers, women, peasants, and other marginalized groups.
Such alliances should not be opportunistic
electoral arrangements alone but movements based on shared commitments to
constitutional democracy, secularism, social justice, and equality.
In an era marked by communal polarization and
authoritarian tendencies, solidarity among oppressed communities becomes
historically essential.
Defence of
Constitutional Democracy
Ambedkar warned that democracy in India was
vulnerable because social inequality contradicted political equality. He also
warned against hero worship and authoritarianism in politics.
Today, the erosion of democratic institutions,
weakening of civil liberties, communal mobilization, suppression of dissent,
and concentration of power present serious challenges to constitutional
democracy. Dalit politics must therefore emerge as a leading force in defending
constitutional values and democratic rights.
The Constitution should not merely be
commemorated symbolically; it should become the basis of mass democratic
mobilization.
Intellectual
and Cultural Assertion
Ambedkar regarded education as the primary
instrument of liberation. He emphasized the need for oppressed communities to
create their own intellectual traditions and leadership.
Dalit politics today requires:
Independent
media institutions, Research centres and think tanks, Literary and cultural
movements, Digital platforms for ideological engagement, Political education
programmes and Documentation of caste discrimination and social injustice
The struggle for cultural and intellectual
autonomy is as important as electoral politics.
Buddhism
and Ethical Humanism
Ambedkar’s conversion to Buddhism represented
an ethical and philosophical rejection of caste hierarchy. He viewed Buddhism
as a rational, egalitarian, and humane alternative to Brahminical social order.
The relevance of Ambedkarite Buddhism today
lies not merely in religious conversion but in its ethical commitment to
equality, compassion, rationality, and social justice. These values can provide
moral foundations for a renewed emancipatory politics.
Conclusion
Dalit politics in contemporary India stands at
a critical historical juncture. Symbolic representation without structural
transformation cannot fulfill the emancipatory vision of Dr. B. R. Ambedkar.
The persistence of caste oppression alongside growing economic inequality and
authoritarian tendencies demands a new radical political orientation.
To genuinely learn from Ambedkar means to
revive his commitment to annihilation of caste, economic democracy,
constitutional morality, and human dignity. Dalit politics must move beyond
narrow electoralism and become a transformative social movement capable of
challenging caste hierarchy, economic exploitation, communalism, and
authoritarianism simultaneously.
The future relevance of Ambedkarite politics
will depend upon its ability to combine social radicalism with democratic
values, economic justice with constitutionalism, and identity assertion with
broader human emancipation. Only such a radical reorientation can carry forward
Ambedkar’s unfinished struggle for an egalitarian and humane society.
All
India Peoples Front (AIPF) acknowledges Dr. Ambedkar's commitment to
the annihilation of caste, economic democracy, constitutional morality, and
human dignity. The Front also fully endorses his agenda of forging a broad
democratic unity encompassing Adivasis, backward classes, minorities, women,
workers, and farmers. To this end, the Front is currently conducting a
'Campaign for Employment and Social Rights,' which is garnering widespread
support from these sections of society. Therefore, the AIPF appeals to Dalits,
Adivasis, the Most Backward Classes, minorities, workers, women, and farmers to
join this campaign, so that the politics of the Hindutva-corporate nexus
prevailing in the country may be defeated, and a democratic, secular, and people-centric
politics may be established.