Integrity: T N Seshan
“I eat politicians for breakfast,” a man who was
India’s Chief Election Commissioner said that when certain politicians sought
to put him in a straitjacket. T N Seshan [1932-2019] was one of the most honest
persons who held a high position in India’s polity. He was the tenth Chief
Election Commissioner and held the office from 1990 to 1996. He became
best-known for his electoral reforms. Until he assumed that office, hardly
anyone knew about the post because it always behaved like a rubber stamp of the
ruling party. At present, it has become worse than a rubber stamp.
Politicians generally assume they are
like kings. Many of them were not happy with Seshan’s electoral reforms which
put serious curbs on their malpractices. So they employed various strategies to
restrain Seshan’s powers as the Chief Election Commissioner. Until 1993, the Election Commission
functioned under Seshan’s singular authority. P V Narasimha Rao’s government
appointed two additional Election Commissioners so that Seshan’s control would
be diluted. But Seshan was not one to yield easily. He challenged Rao’s move in
the Supreme Court which chose to uphold the government’s decision.
Several of Seshan’s decisions, like
strict enforcement of the Model Code or cancelling polls when malpractices were
detected, were legally contested by the political powers. Many state
governments and local officials dragged their feet in implementing Seshan’s
directives. Even the decision to issue photo identity cards to voters was
delayed by the bureaucrats on orders from politicians. If you can’t stop him,
slow him down – that was the strategy.
The people in power did their best to
undermine Seshan’s very credibility and portray him as an unreasonable and
impractical man. In spite of everything they did, Seshan went ahead with the
reforms he had envisaged. He succeeded largely due to his integrity which the ordinary
citizens of India perceived clearly. He received immense public support. Power
could not restrain Seshan because he operated at a rare intersection where law,
legitimacy, and personal integrity converged.
There is a moment in every story of
integrity when compromise appears reasonable. But Seshan refused that moment.
When politicians pushed back, he did not withdraw an inch. When the
establishment attempted to dilute his authority by restructuring the Election
Commission, he fought back legally. Even when the outcome did not fully favour
him, he did not retreat into silence or compliance.
Integrity, in his hands, was not
politeness; it was defiance with legitimacy. What makes him particularly
compelling for us is this: his integrity was not confined to personal virtue.
It became institutional integrity. He demonstrated that one individual, armed
with conviction and constitutional clarity, could restore credibility to an
entire system.
Seshan was difficult to oppose
legally, dangerous to fight politically, and impossible to ignore morally.
PS. This post is a part
of Blogchatter A2Z Challenge 2026
Previous Posts in this
series
Tomorrow: Joker


I remember his name in the political circles but at his prime time was too small to understand politics. Now I know why his name is so significant.
ReplyDeleteFor us, he was a hero. Some of us adored him. I lived in Shillong in those days and was teaching in a school. The place was a cauldron of seething sectarian sentiments. Many of us longed for a stern leader with strong convictions and principles - like Seshan.
DeleteHis integrity and conviction showed up only when he became the CEC of India. All the same, in his tenure as the CEC, he demonstrated a lot of grit and gave a strong message to both the Indian politicians and the Indian beaurocrats that he could not be taken for a ride. He changed the system for betterment. In that sense, he was a one man army. Your thoughts about him are agreeable. It would have been better had he not fought the election for the president of India.
ReplyDeleteSeshan was known for his integrity even before he became the CEC. His name became synonymous with the crusade against corruption, money power, and muscle power in Indian politics. No one accused him of corruption at any time. Many saw in him a megalomaniac or even potential dictator. But his megalomania was nothing in comparison with our present The Leader.
DeleteI remember Seshan appearing in television interviews. The man would argue every challenge to his point of view firmly and logically. Alsation they used to call him. He exuded authority and commanded respect. People would not dare misuse their powers when he was at the helm of affairs. And he was not frightened of using his powers. They don't make them like that anymore.
ReplyDeleteYes, I too used to watch him on the TV with unmistakable admiration. He proved that authority can be wielded like a dictator and yet be benign. Yes, benign dictator - if there ever could be one. I wish we had more of them now.
DeleteYes. Seshan stood for his convictions and was indeed a symbol of integrity, Moral Grit and Operational Tenacity and Verve. Among three qualities, you crowned him with in the last paragraph, Moral Ascendancy stands out..the opposite of the present incumbent in the ECI. Yes. He stood out as a symbol of Personal Integrity, extended to Institutional Integrity. His Integrity was his legitimacy, even if Law did not go along with him. Whether he won his case or not, Judiciary was more Live and Live and more Straight and less reed-like those days... Let us await the emergence of more Seshans... To get us out of this Kaliyuga, where Truth is no more Swayamprakasha...
ReplyDeleteAlive
ReplyDeleteHari Om
ReplyDeleteIntegrity... a rare commodity! Inculcating values and sticking to them requires Imagination, determination, and courage. This can look every bit as terrifying as the erroneous ways of others... YAM xx