Almost coinciding with the  Election Commission of India’s announcement of dates for elections to five  State Assemblies, the Supreme Court’s interpretation of Section 123(3) of the  Representation of People’s Act (RPA) in Abhiram Singh v/s C.D. Comachen (dead)  by Lrs and Ors. (Civil Appeal No. 37/1992) seems destined to be honoured more  in the breach. The Supreme Court ruled that politicians cannot invoke religion,  race, caste, community or language to seek a mandate from voters, and that such  practice would result in annulment of the election. 
The day after the ruling  and before the ECI announcement of dates, which kicks in the model code of  conduct, Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) leader Mayawati addressed a press conference  wherein she advised Muslims not to split their votes (between non-BJP parties)  and added that her Scheduled Caste votebank would not be swayed by hollow  promises (from rival parties).
In this manner, caste and  religion, the cornerstones of our electoral politics since 1947, were  matter-of-factly invoked by India’s most openly caste-based political party  (BSP was founded by late Kanshi Ram to consolidate lower caste votes). The  party is struggling to stay in the reckoning in the critical state of Uttar  Pradesh, where elections are due next month. 
Mayawati helpfully  explained her political sums: The Samajwadi Party is on the verge of a split,  so Muslims should not divide and waste their vote on either segment. Despite  making such explicit statements, she denied Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s charge  that she believes in caste-based politics and claimed that the BSP has  distributed tickets to all castes based on the concept of Sarvjan Hitaya (well-being of all). Thus, Muslims have been allotted 97 tickets, Scheduled  Castes 87, OBCs 106, and Upper Castes 113. Mayawati added that the BSP has  supported finance-based reservations for upper castes, Muslims, and other  religious minorities in Parliament.
The BSP intends to exploit  emotive caste issues such as the suicide of Hyderabad student Rohit Vemula,  whose caste identity has been a matter of dispute between his biological  parents; and the undeniably shameful incident of lynching of Dalits in Una,  Gujarat. The BSP supremo disparaged the Prime Minister’s launch of the Bharat  Interface for Money (BHIM) App, named after Dr Bhimrao Ambedkar, to promote  cashless transactions, and remains critical of the demonetisation programme. 
The Bharatiya Janata Party  proposes to fight the polls on the twin planks of demonetisation and the  post-Uri surgical strike in Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir – both emotive and highly  secular subjects with no caste connotations. Its rivals are expected to be  dismissive of both.
Of all political parties,  the BSP is emphatic that Caste is a socio-political institution with deep roots  in the hoary origins of Hindu society; it admits that economic deprivation is  not co-terminus with caste ranking. It is undeniable that low social ranking  has caused deep scars in society; even monotheistic faiths discriminate against  lower caste converts. 
Beginning with  Untouchability, many social, economic and cultural issues have a pronounced  caste angle and cannot be addressed without acknowledging caste. This is  evident in recent demands for extension of Other Backward Classes (OBC) quotas  to landowning, regionally-dominant castes, most notably Jats in Rajasthan and  Haryana, and Patidars in Gujarat. Each agitation was deliberately violent and  posed serious challenges to the respective States. 
Legitimate or otherwise,  the demands were framed around the issue of caste identity and deprivation, and  mitigation efforts (offers of reservations within State quotas, mostly  unsuccessful) have to be framed in the same language. If persons contesting  elections are denied the right to address citizens’ concerns regarding  perceived injustices faced by them and originating in religion, race, caste,  community or language, it would “reduce democracy to an abstraction,” as  Justice D.Y. Chandrachud pointed out in the dissenting judgment.
The issue of reservations  in educational institutions and government employment are at the heart of the  politicisation of caste but has not been touched in the Supreme Court verdict;  yet it threatens to cancel elections if votes are sought in the name of caste. 
Reservations in educational  institutions, especially in coveted courses like medicine and engineering,  include lowering qualifying standards. Students are pushed by ambitious parents  to take admission but cannot manage the academic pressure; they either fail or  even commit suicide. The seat for that term thus goes waste. But there is no  rethinking regarding the worth of a degree (if finally secured) if the doctor  or engineer it produces is not good enough. 
Worse, in recent years, the  Supreme Court has ruled that seats for which reservation quotas cannot be  filled in a particular year are to be carried over the next year, and not  released into general quota. This has intensified caste tensions in society  like no other measure. The position is similar with government jobs, and these  issues have made reservations a ticking time bomb.
The nomenclature of parties  like the Akali Dal and All India Muslim League is possibly the least of the  problems, for innocuously named parties like the Popular Front of India are far  more lethal. But parties that seek to redress regional pride such as the Telugu  Desam founded by cine star NT Rama Rao, or seek a separate state, such as K.  Chandrashekar Rao’s Telangana Rashtra Samithi, also become illegitimate under  this sweeping interpretation of electoral malpractice. It makes free speech  virtually impossible.
This raises questions  regarding the enforceability of the Supreme Court ruling. Although Mayawati’s  press conference was covered live on television, neither the Supreme Court,  senior lawyers, or any political party deigned to censure her breach of judicial diktat. Prime Minister Modi, at a huge rally in Lucknow, only said,  “Will politics stoop so low? Why were some people troubled when we launch a  mobile app after Bhimrao Ambedkar?” 
Caste is too complex to be  tackled by simple bans. Also, blatant appeals to religion, caste and other  parochial loyalties have always been prohibited and there is no dispute  regarding the Supreme Court’s attempt to lift politics above narrow identities.  However, though the RPA specifically bans inducing voter(s) to choose or reject  a particular candidate under spiritual or community censure, not one word of  criticism has been ever uttered when the Catholic Church repeatedly exhorts  citizens to vote in a particular way in States where the community has  substantial presence. Such issues raise legitimate fears that the ruling may be  implemented by cherry picking rather than by a reasoned understanding of what  constitutes genuine electoral malpractice.
First published The Pioneer, Sparing the  Caste root, and striking at the tree
  http://www.dailypioneer.com/columnists/edit/sparing-the-caste-root-and-striking-at-the-tree.html
Also read
  1.  Rethinking caste - why  it cannot be so one dimensional 
  2. Caste as social capital  
  3.The truth about caste  
  4.  Demystifying caste