There is nothing in the 3-point resolution reached just before midnight last Friday that is not already in the 12-point, 40-point, or 6-point agreements that have gone before.
Striking an agreement is not the problem, the difficulty is putting into practice what is agreed. Which is why they took it right down to the wire last week: so they could pull a fast one, fudge things so that they could continue to bicker endlessly. There is nothing here that couldn't have been agreed on six months ago, so why did the interlocutors indulge in such brinkmanship, punish the people with crippling strikes and hold the country's economy and development hostage?
Our politicians outdid themselves. Even by the low standards of responsibility and conscientiousness that they have now become world renowned for, their selfish and mindless lust for power that is the heart of this deadlock is breathtaking.
We have a habit here of always looking at the bright side, however, and this time, too, we could say, "It could have been worse." The 3-point agenda may be a dud, but at least the CA term was extended. The last-minute non-deal pulled us back from the edge of the cliff. It was a face-saving collection of words that bought time for more bickering for sure, but not extending the CA would have invited an even more dangerous scenario of instability and upheaval. The extremists of the right and left would have exploited the fluid situation to push through their agenda of turning the clock back, and squeezing the democratic middle.
There are only two ways ahead. One is to be cynical about it and say the Maoists will never compromise, the prime minister will never resign, and one year won't be enough. The other is to strengthen the moderate and pragmatic voices within all three parties so that they look beyond their partisan ambitions to the long-term national interest.
Just one glance at the economy may be instructive: the contraction of the banking sector continues, high interest rates have killed new investments and the balance of trade deficit with India has created a shortage of Indian rupees and fostered a black market in cash. The nation and the people can't take this punishment for much longer.
It doesn't really matter who gets to be prime minister. In fact, 'none of the above' would be the way to go, handing over day-to-day governance to a small team of technocrats within each party that can get the economy moving again, improve service delivery and tackle law and order so businesses are not extorted and people can live without fear of being kidnapped.
The politicians can then concentrate on what they were elected to do: write an inclusive, democratic constitution that will extricate this country from the quagmire they have got us into.