78 Years of Independence: Has India’s Core Social Justice Movement Lost Its Way?

Seventy-eight years after independence, India still struggles to fulfill the dream of equality and justice for every section of society. Among the major ideological movements to emerge after independence, the politics of social justice stood out as a force that aimed not merely for power, but for a complete transformation of the social structure. Its deepest roots lay in Bihar, where leaders like Jayaprakash Narayan, Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia, Karpoori Thakur, and later Lalu Prasad Yadav and Nitish Kumar gave it direction and strength.

Today, however, this same politics of social justice appears mired in ideological confusion, dynastic interests, and a relentless race for power. The pressing question is: Has this movement lost its original path?

India’s freedom struggle was not just a fight against British colonialism — it was also a battle against the entrenched caste hierarchy and economic inequality within society. Within the Congress, leaders such as Jayaprakash Narayan, Acharya Narendra Dev, and Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia believed that political independence was incomplete without social equality. This conviction led to the formation of the Congress Socialist Party (CSP) in 1934.

After independence, as the Congress consolidated power, socialist leaders felt that the party had turned capitalist and elitist in its orientation. They broke away to form the Praja Socialist Party (PSP), which would later become the ideological foundation for the politics of social justice.

Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia laid the philosophical groundwork for social justice. He identified the caste system as the greatest evil of Indian society, arguing that democracy would remain incomplete as long as caste-based inequality persisted.

Lohia proposed his famous idea of the “Sapta Kranti” — the Seven Revolutions — calling for struggle against caste, gender, color, economic inequality, private property, unjust wars, and social exploitation.

His slogan, “Pichhda Pawe Sau Mein Saath” (Sixty out of a hundred for the backward classes), was not merely a demand for reservation. It was a call for equal participation of the backward classes in social and political power structures. This philosophy later became the driving force of politics in Bihar and Uttar Pradesh.

By the 1970s, widespread corruption and centralization of power had created deep dissatisfaction. Jayaprakash Narayan (JP) responded with his call for “Sampoorna Kranti” (Total Revolution) — not just to topple a government, but to fundamentally change the system.

JP’s movement became a political nursery for leaders like Lalu Prasad Yadav, Nitish Kumar, and Ram Vilas Paswan. It awakened the marginalized — the poor, the farmers, and the backward classes — to their rightful place in power.

When the Janata Party came to power in 1977, Karpoori Thakur became the Chief Minister of Bihar. In 1978, he implemented the Karpoori Formula, ensuring reservations for backward classes — a historic step that reshaped Indian politics.

In 1990, Prime Minister V. P. Singh implemented the recommendations of the Mandal Commission, granting 27% reservation in government jobs and education for the OBCs. During this period, Lalu Prasad Yadav coined the slogan “Power to the Poor” and built the Dalit–Backward–Muslim (DMY) alliance that brought social justice politics to power in Bihar.

Lalu Yadav stood firmly against the BJP’s “Kamandal” politics — a metaphor for the Hindutva agenda. His act of stopping L.K. Advani’s Rath Yatra became a defining symbol of resistance. From 1990 to 2005, the politics of social justice was at its peak in Bihar, giving voice and visibility to the backward classes across villages and towns.

But the same era also marked the beginning of its decline. The original goal of Lohia and JP was not just caste empowerment, but economic and social equality. Over time, however, this politics shrank into mere caste identity politics.
Land reforms, education, employment, and corruption — the key pillars of social transformation — faded into the background. Power politics replaced ideological commitment.

Lalu Yadav’s government became synonymous with corruption and lawlessness (“jungle raj”), tarnishing the moral standing of the movement. Meanwhile, Nitish Kumar sought to rebrand social justice through the slogan of “good governance”, but his alliance with the BJP raised questions about ideological consistency.

While the Mandal movement gave backward classes a share in power, its benefits largely went to a few dominant OBC castes. The Extremely Backward Classes (EBCs) and Mahadalits felt sidelined. Nitish Kumar capitalized on this by giving these groups a distinct identity, breaking into Lalu’s Mandal base.

The BJP too adopted similar strategies, using slogans like “Sabka Saath, Sabka Vikas” (Together with all, development for all) to expand its footprint on the social justice terrain. As a result, social justice politics today is fragmented — divided into small caste-based factions rather than united under a common vision.

Social justice is not just a slogan — it is the soul of Indian democracy. To revive it, socialist parties must take concrete steps:

Move beyond caste-centric politics and focus on employment, education, healthcare, and economic equality.

End dynastic politics and empower young and ideologically committed workers with leadership roles.

Take a firm stance against corruption.

Revive institutions like the Socialist Youth Federation to foster ideological training and awareness.

Ensure that social justice reflects not only in speeches but also in policy — from education and employment to administrative reforms.

The politics of social justice deepened Indian democracy by bringing power and dignity to those long deprived of both. But today, caught in the web of electoral opportunism, it risks losing its moral and ideological essence.

If socialist parties rise above power struggles and return to addressing the real issues of the people — jobs, education, dignity, and equality of opportunity — the idea of social justice can once again come alive.

This is not merely a political direction — it is a fight to preserve the soul of Indian democracy.

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