Will the Gandhi scion be able to overcome the prevailing sentiment against the politics of dynasty?
DK Shivakumar’s mandate may be confined to Karnataka by
virtue of his being a minister there but his sentiments seem to transcend the
state’s borders and find resonance with a section of the Congress party’s
central leaders. That is not to say that no one in the party’s central
leadership had thought on those lines before or aired similar sentiments in the
past.
Chidambaram and (right) Kalam Nath |
Not being exceptionally media-savvy or not having a Twitter
account should be the least of Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi’s worries
today. (Not that having a presence on social media is a bad idea.) For one who
claims to have spent the better part of the past seven years reorganising the
Youth Congress, he does not have much to show by way of outcomes. A straw poll
would indicate that there is still a deep-seated resentment among a section of
the Youth Congress activists at the manner in which the Gandhi scion has gone
about ushering in purported reforms, which have been implemented more in the
breach.
When Rahul came to head the Youth Congress in 2007, he spoke
about democratising the organisation by regularly holding elections, but a
common refrain even today is that family connections matter more than merit in
the party and its various organs.
One sentiment that clearly emerges from interacting with
some of the workers is that the Congress party seems to be woefully out of sync
with the prevailing sentiment, inside and outside the party and in India’s
hinterland, against the politics of dynasty and entitlement.
The asymmetry between the two principal political parties in
the country today becomes even more pronounced when one considers who the
Gandhis — Sonia and Rahul — are pitted against: Narendra Modi, who rose from
being a chaiwallah in his childhood to occupy the highest office in the land,
and Amit Shah, who rose from within the ranks to head the BJP. In such a
situation, to rope in another dynast from the same family — Priyanka Gandhi
Vadra — in the hope that she would pull the party out of the morass it finds
itself in, is hardly going to be a solution. (The irony is unmistakable: The
same Congress worker who rails against nepotism sees Priyanka as a saviour who
will wave the proverbial magic wand and, voila!, make it all look good again.
For her part, she has indicated time and again that she is not ready and willing
yet to play a more active role in the party’s affairs.)
It should not come as a surprise that the Congress rank and
file feels a sense of despair, made even more acute by the perceived absence of
Rahul from the party’s affairs post the Maharashtra and Haryana Assembly
elections. Incidentally, Rahul is a key part of a 12-member Congress committee
constituted to “look into future challenges” but the nature and contours of the
deliberations undertaken by this panel remain a mystery.
Similarly, the conclusions or recommendations by a committee
set up under the chairmanship of AK Antony to examine the reasons for the
party’s debacle in the Lok Sabha election did not help matters by absolving the
party office-bearers of all responsibility. Instead, the committee’s report
sought to ascribe the party’s loss to unspecified organisational handicaps and,
oddly, manipulation of the media by its rival. Admittedly, winning isn’t
everything but then again, you don’t win silver, you lose gold!
For a party that practically invented the art of election
engineering, to commit the same mistake that its rivals did some decades ago is
unforgivable. (In a sense, it speaks to the bankruptcy of the Congress’
present-day leaders.) The late Indira Gandhi won a landslide in 1971 on the
back of a simple yet effective slogan of “Woh kehte hain Indira hatao, main
kehti hoon garibi hatao (They are saying remove Indira, I’m saying remove
poverty.)” The more her rivals (who had banded together in a grand alliance)
conducted a personalised campaign against her, the more she gained. Cut to
2014, and the same Congress party targeted Modi at the expense of everything
else, and ended up handing him an unprecedented victory at the hustings.
The Congress strategists seem to have forgotten that there
is something called a law of diminishing returns and the effectiveness of a
unidimensional campaign begins to wear off after a certain period of time. And
this stratagem of the Congress to selectively target Modi will continue to
bother the party if, as is being anticipated, it gangs up with some of its
‘secular’ allies against a resurgent bjp and trains its guns on Modi in the
states where elections are due. The Congress needs to change tack to counter
the Modi phenomenon.
If Rahul is missing in action, so are certain erstwhile
Congress ministers who seem to have gone into hibernation after the Lok Sabha
election. The alacrity with which some of them have resumed their professional
careers sends out the wrong signal that they are abandoning the party when it
needs their services the most. Consequently, the task of articulating the
party’s views has been outsourced ad hoc to individuals who lack the requisite
skills or the stature to make forceful interventions.
For the Congress party and its brains trust, now is not the
time for window dressing; now is the time for a dressing down. Cosmetic surgery
won’t do anymore. Rahul will have to lead from the front and ensure that his
interventions are consistent, not sporadic. His cameos such as the ordinance-is-complete-nonsense-it-
should-be-torn-up-and-thrown-away or his aggressive speech at the All India
Congress Committee session in January this year have proved inadequate,
sometimes counter-productive. On 28 October, Rahul met with his colleagues in
what was only his first formal interaction with them after the recent round of
Assembly elections. On the occasion, he touched upon the issue of holding
organisational elections that would be transparent and fair. It remains to be
seen how effective those elections prove to be in infusing new vigour into the
party.
A reluctant politician Rahul might be but there is a thin
line that divides being reluctant from being (or coming across as being)
disinterested. This was brought out starkly earlier this year in Rahul’s
interview to Times Now television channel. He was asked: “Had you not been a
Gandhi, would you have been in politics at all?” His reply was neither
categorical nor in the affirmative. The import of that silence (reticence?) was
not lost on a discerning audience, some of whom wondered why the tenets of
equal opportunity and internal democracy should not extend to his job.
As the party introspects and contemplates its future course
of action, it could begin with rightsizing its top-heavy organisation, rejigging
its team of officebearers at the national and state levels and spotting new
talent within and outside the party, instead of paying a lefthanded compliment
to the bjp by iterating that the latter marketed itself better in the Lok Sabha
polls. As Chidambaram warned, the morale is low and the party’s leadership must
respond urgently.
The question before the Gandhis is: would they rather
perpetuate themselves than see the party revive and reinvent itself in keeping
with the times we live in?
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