Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

‘Rahul Gandhi’s US visit is a part of new conversati­on’

- Yashwant Raj letters@hindustant­imes.com

WASHINGTON: Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi’s US tour, that started Monday with a speech at a California university ,had been months in the making, if not more, and was planned as part of a “new conversati­on” that the party wants to start about the future of India and its position in the world, former advisor to the Prime Minister Sam Pitroda said.

The Congress leader will be engaging innovators, leaders in varied fields, policy mavens and young minds as he traverses across the country, with two days in DC packed with back-to-back discussion­s at leading thinktanks, with experts on both the right and the left. “This is a part of the beginning of a new conversati­on that had been in the works for a long time — about the future of India, and the ideas that could drive it, said Pitroda, who has planned Gandhi’s US tour and who had ushered a telecommun­ications revolution in India decades ago while working with Gandhi’s father, then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi.

Pitroda told HT he will be working with The Indus Entreprene­urs (TiE), a Silicon Valley non-profit co-founded by one of the first Indian IT success stories — Kanwal Rekhi — to support start-ups, to develop “white papers on four or five” key areas to focus on, that could include energy, small and medium enterprise­s and healthcare.

The central pitch, according to Pitroda, is that the “existing world order”, which came up around the United States, is on its way out and India can take a lead in shaping the new order, which, for instance, is inclusive to begin with — “you cannot ignore 200 million Muslims (in India)”.

The Congress vice-president, who touched upon some these themes in his prepared remarks at University of California, Berkeley, on Monday and may explore them in his deep-dives with experts and policy wonks he is scheduled to meet in DC later this week, starting with think tank Centre for American Progress (CAP).

The liberal-leaning CAP was founded by John Podesta, who chaired Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign, and is run by Indian American Neera Tanden, a veteran of many Democratic administra­tions, including President Barack Obama’s.

Gandhi then visits another DC think-tank, the Atlantic Council, which has a strong focus on South Asia, and then the US-India Business Council, an advocacy group that works on promoting business ties between the two countries and which is now emerging from a specially bruising split.

Gandhi also has an interactio­n with experts organised and hosted by conservati­ve-leaning Heritage Foundation and Republican strategist Puneet Ahluwalia.

There has been some speculatio­n that Gandhi may have a meeting at the White House, but organisers have strenuousl­y denied it.

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Rahul Gandhi

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