Gulf Today

Rahul Gandhi’s bid to keep Congress relevant

- BRP Bh askar, P olitical Commentato­r

Along with the Modi regime’s alleged failures, the Bharatiya Janata Party’s hate politics figures as a major theme of the speeches Congress leader Rahul Gandhi who is currently on a 150-day march across the entire length of India, covering a distance of more than 3,500 kil0metres on foot.

The march began last week at Kanyakumar­i in Tamil Nadu, at the southern tip of the subcontine­nt. It will end in Jammu and Kashmir, the northernmo­st state of India.

The name “Bharat Jodo Yatra” given to the march suggests that its objective is to unite the nation which Hindutva forces have divided on the basis of religion.

A criticism secular forces can legitimate­ly raise against later generation­s of the Nehru-gandhi family is that they did not combat Hindu communalis­m as vigorously as Jawaharlal Nehru did. In fact, they invited the criticism that, instead of confrontin­g Hindutva forces, they chose to appease them by toeing a sot Hindutva line.

Before the march began, the Nehru-gandhi family made it known that none of its members — Sonia Gandhi, son Rahul and daughter Priyanka — will be a candidate for the post of Congress President in the organisati­onal elections which are under way. In doing so, it conceded the demand of a group of dissident leaders that someone from outside the family must become the Congress President.

This does not mean the family will lose its pre-eminent position in the party. While it has not publicly endorsed any candidate, there are reports that it favours the election of Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot as the party president.

He is one of the leaders accompanyi­ng Rahul Gandhi in his cross-country march.

Some leaders eying the post of Congress President seem to imagine that the post will automatica­lly make one the party’s prime ministeria­l candidate. It is too early for any Congress leader to develop prime ministeria­l ambitions. At the moment, the primary task before the leaders is to strengthen the party and recapture its past glory. This calls for joint efforts by both the Nehu-gandhi family and the dissident elements.

If Rahul Gandhi is able to create new enthusiasm in party workers across the more than 12 states through which the march to re-unite the nation will pass, it will certainly go a long way in making the Congress, which is now in a bad shape, relevant once again. In the process, Rahul Gandhi, whose leadership qualities have been called into question in the recent past, may have rendered himself also relevant.

The BJP has been quick to realise this. Rahul Gandhi and his fellow -matchers are still in the far south, a region which has been inhospitab­le to the Hindutva camp. They still have to go a long way to reach the Hindi belt where the BJP has establishe­d its sway.

On Saturday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s chief lieutenant and Home Minister, Amit Shah launched a personal atack on Rahul Gandhi while speaking at a public meeting im Jodhpur, Rajasthan.

He saud Rajasthan and Chhatisgar­h, both in the Hindi region, are the only two states now under Congress government­s. “If BJP forms the government in these two states ater the next Assembly elections, then Congress will be let with nothing,” he added.

Shah then went on to claim that Rahul Gandhi was wearing a foreign T-shirt worth more than Rs 41,000 during the march.

The BJP tweeted screenshot of a British firm’s catalogue showing a price tag of Rs 41,257.

The T-shirt tweet may be seen as a delayed tit-for-tat response to Rahul Gandhi’s criticisn of Narendra Modi a few years ago for accepting a suit worth Rs 1 million gited by a businessma­n. Gandhi later branded the Modi regime “”a suit-boot government” Neither Amit Shah nor the BJP responded to Rahul Gandhi’s charge of hate politics. The Congress party responded to the T-shirt controvers­y with an appeal to the Prime Minister to come to the real issues and not hoodwink the people.

Ahead on Rahul Gandhi’s long route are BJP stronghold­s, which have served as laboratori­es of hate politics. The rest of India will watch with keen interest to know how Hindutva elements there respond to Rahul Gandhi’s campaign.

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