The last time
Prachanda was Prime Minister, his government fell because he refused to understand how
coalition governments work. He exhibited dictatorial tendencies. In the aftermath he has blamed everyone except himself.
Ram Baran Yadav did what he was elected to do: protect the constitution.
Prachanda needed the support of all his coalition partners before he could have sacked the army chief. Even after he had accumulated that support, he needed to go through the president. He did not think it necessary to seek support from his coalition partners, and he totally bypassed the president. Those were two grave mistakes, they were two illegal actions. And that is why his government fell.
It was okay for Prachanda to have led a
majority government. But according to Prachanda it was not okay for Madhav Nepal to have led a majority government. Prachanda leading a majority government was a patriotic, nationalist government. But Madhav Nepal leading a majority government was a
puppet government run by
India. That has been Prachanda's logic.
Someone who does not understand how coalition governments work can not lead a majority, coalition government, let alone a national
consensus government. Prachanda's idea of a national consensus government is one where all parties in parliament follow the dictates of the
Maoist central committee. He has not learned his lessons. He has not exhibited democratic tendencies.
And that is before the lingering issues of army integration. The idea that 19,000 Maoist soldiers with 3,000 guns will take over a country of 30 million people has always been laughable. Issuing empty threats is generally considered bad politics.
Even if the Maoists are okay with
Baburam Bhattarai leading a possible national consensus government, there are no guarantees a national consensus government can be formed. But a willingness on Prachanda's part to be open to that possibility will at least send a signal that the Maoists are now better understanding how coalition governments work.
A national consensus government will necessarily have a steering committee representing all participating parties that will take all the key decisions that the government has to take.
The parties have been going on the army integration issue exactly the wrong way. A Nepal Army Bill 2010 has to be worked on by the full parliament, not the party presidents. Bypassing the parliament has been the reason the army integration issue has gone nowhere.
The bill has to go through a full debate. That bill would decide the future size and composition and modality of the future Nepal Army.
But over time I have gotten the impression Prachanda passed his SLC exams after perhaps a third attempt and he now wants a Nepali Congress prime minister.