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Rahul’s comeback attack

RAHUL Gandhi is in the news for one reason or the other.

Rahul’s comeback attack


Kuldip Nayar

RAHUL Gandhi is in the news for one reason or the other. The other day the debate was on his 57-day leave of absence from the country. In fact, Rahul himself should have talked about his passion for chanting if that is what he was doing in Myanmar. That the party leaders other than her mother and Congress president Sonia Gandhi have preferred to make his absence as his private affair does not help. 

Public leaders have no private life once they are in the people's domain. People like the leaders to take them into their confidence. It gives them a vicarious satisfaction of intimacy. Jawaharlal Nehru, Rahul Gandhi’s great grandfather, always told about his trips abroad to people at public meetings and also conveyed to the chief ministers in letters that he wrote every fortnight. 

Today’s debate is about Rahul’s vitriolic attack on Narendra Modi on the land acquisition Bill. Not that Modi is above criticism. But Rahul's remark that the Prime Minister had brought down the reputation of India by saying in Canada that they were cleansing the litter left behind by the previous regime was churlish. It would have been better if Rahul had preferred to stay quiet on Modi's observations in Canada.

I recall when Inder Kumar Gujral, then in the Opposition, was in Geneva, he resisted the temptation of criticising the Congress. He said that he had plenty of opportunities to do so in the country itself. Why should the dirty linen be washed abroad?

Many will agree with Rahul that Modi should have avoided commenting on the domestic politics while in foreign countries. Ideally, there should be a bipartisan approach in comments on this subject. In fact, this was the attitude continued to be reflected till the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) came to power. The party behaved like the opposition party even while in office. Unfortunately, that habit has got stuck with the BJP. 

Rahul’s biggest asset is that he is from the dynasty that has guided the party from its inception. His mother Sonia Gandhi will see to it that he succeeds her. But the disadvantage from such a practice is that the merit in the party is ignored. Nehru did not allow Morarji Desai to have his due because he had his daughter, Indira Gandhi, in mind. Maybe, the dynasty has given the country a sense of continuity but it has put several genuine claimants in jeopardy. It is a Hobson’s choice which a democratic country can ill-afford. 

The absolute majority that Modi got in Parliament showed that the nation wanted to move from this scenario. The resurgence of the BJP was essentially an expression against the Congress, not for the former. By and large, the country has come to develop a secular temperament, realising that only parochialism will undo the idea of India. The pro-Hindutva BJP too has come to realise that. Home Minister Rajnath Singh endorsed this view in a recent speech. 

The 10-month non-rule of Modi shows that the rhetoric during the election campaign has not gone beyond the paper. This may have disappointed the core of Hindutva. But Rahul Gandhi has found in it a climate favourable to him. He seems to have drawn a page from his grandmother, Indira Gandhi’s book to make most of the situation. She played the Garibi Hatao (oust poverty) card and rehabilitated the Congress at a time when there were fissures appearing in the party.

 In the same manner, Rahul has coined the phrase of suit-boot ki sarkar. He too has realised that the criticism of the rich goes down well in a country where the have-nots abound. His party has, however, gone miles away from the ideology of socialism which it once proudly owned and propagated. In this way, the Congress has somewhat repudiated Nehru who would say that a country which had so many poor people had no option except to move left.

Rahul, whatever the jibes of the BJP, has touched the respondent chord. The untimely rain has damaged the wheat crop in northern India, particularly Punjab and Haryana, India's granary. The case in Maharashtra is no different from most states in the North. It is a bitter story for the mango and sugarcane growers. For the state's beleaguered farm sector, crippled by two drought years in 2012 and 2014 and recurrent hailstorms and unseasonal rainfall, the latest blow came earlier this month when a fresh hailstorm destroyed the standing crops, including, cruelly, some ready for harvest. 

The state governments may bail out farmers but cannot do to a great extent because their financial condition is not too happy. Rahul has found a convenient target. But this does not help in the long run. It may be a scoring point during elections. The political parties have to join hands to face the calamity which has befallen on the country, not on a particular political organisation.

The opposition built on the basis of the land Bill is counter-productive.  The Congress itself had passed similar legislation when it was in power. Of course, the consent of farmers and social impact have been wrongly dropped from the BJP's Bill but, as Prime Minister Modi has said, he is open to suggestions. This indicates he may agree to some points which Rahul has made. 

Rahul’s attack on the government may give a wrong impression that he was for a progressive setup. Jyotiraditya Scindia was quick in saying that his party was not anti-corporate because he knows that all political parties draw funds for elections from industrial houses and businessmen. Whether the Congress, with its close connections with the corporate sector, can reclaim its constituency among the poor is yet to be seen. But if the perception of Rahul’s speech spreads such an impression, he would have underlined his importance. 

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