Patna: In what could be mistaken for an avant-garde experiment in governance, Bihar’s legislative assembly has appointed a strongman politician with a colourful past to its Committee on Environmental Protection and Pollution Control — a move that observers say finally aligns environmental policy with its natural habitat: irony.
The appointment of Anant Singh, a don-turned-MLA better known for his muscle than his musings on methane emissions, was approved as part of a broader reshuffle that saw 19 committees constituted ahead of the new financial year.
Asked about his vision for the environment, Singh offered a response of disarming clarity. “I don’t know anything about all this. I have no clue what I’ve been appointed to, or what I haven’t,” he said — inadvertently delivering what experts are calling the most accurate policy statement on environmental governance in recent memory.
The remark has since travelled faster than particulate matter on a windy day, prompting both amusement and concern among those who still believe that committees are meant to address the subjects they are named after.
Singh, often referred to as “Chhote Sarkar”, was released from jail on March 23 in connection with a murder case. His return to public life was marked by jubilant scenes, as supporters gathered in large numbers — a reminder that in politics, as in ecosystems, dominant species tend to thrive regardless of external conditions.
The environment panel is one of 19 committees constituted for the 2026–27 term, approved by assembly speaker Prem Kumar. The tenure of these committees runs from April 1, 2026 to March 31, 2027 — a full year, presumably enough time for both the environment and expectations to adjust.
Elsewhere, the tourism committee will be chaired by another strongman figure, Manoranjan Singh, also known as “Dhumal Singh”, suggesting a broader policy approach that might be described as experiential governance: those who have seen the system from the inside are now invited to manage it from the top.
Critics say the appointments reflect a long-standing trend in which political loyalty and local clout outweigh domain expertise. Supporters, meanwhile, argue that such leaders bring “ground experience” — though it remains unclear whether that includes familiarity with air quality indices or waste management protocols.
For environmentalists, the development raises deeper questions about how seriously ecological challenges are being taken. Bihar, like much of India, faces mounting pressures from pollution, deforestation and climate variability — issues that typically require technical understanding, long-term planning and, occasionally, knowing what the job actually involves.
Yet, in a system where governance often resembles a complex food chain, the appointment may be less an anomaly than a perfect adaptation. After all, in politics as in nature, survival tends to favour not the most qualified, but the most resilient.
As one observer put it: “If nothing else, at least the honesty is refreshing.”





















