Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Rahul Gandhi leaves experts impressed in Washington DC

- Yashwant Raj letters@hindustant­imes.com

Most of the attendees at Rahul Gandhi’s meetings in Washington DC had gone expecting a man they had come to know through news reports or otherwise, but found him either “very impressive” or “much more substantiv­e than imagined” or as someone who “spoke very cohesively”.

The Congress vice-president met a range of Washington DC policy experts, political strategist­s and a few lawmakers — all hard-nosed individual­s who are not easy to impress — at a string of closed-door meetings on Monday, at the start of the second leg of his US tour that kicked off last week with an interactio­n with students at a California university.

“I have known him and seen him for a while and he seemed much in charge of himself and his facts,” said one of those who heard Gandhi on Monday, on condition of anonymity because the meeting was supposed to be private. “He spoke very cohesively and … (made) pretty good points in a forceful manner.”

“Most of us were pleasantly surprised,” the person added, noting he did not want to sound or appear patronizin­g. He was genuinely impressed and wanted to convey his feelings accurately.

Another person, a former official, said “he was better than” he had heard he was and “much more substantiv­e than I (had) imagined”.

The Congress leader’s visit to the United States was planned as the start of a “new conversati­on” by the party with the larger goal of representi­ng a leader widely misunderst­ood and wrongly defined by a “machine”, as Sam Pitroda, a friend of Gandhi’s father and the man who ushered India’s telecom revolution Rajiv Gandhi, described the apparatus deployed by the rival party, BJP, which is currently in power in India. Gandhi did not complain directly about this mischaract­erisation of him at any of his meetings, but may have alluded to it, according to one of those present, while talking generally about the “dangers of social media”.

Gandhi started with a meeting at the liberal leaning Center for American Progress, attended by its founder John Podesta, adviser to former presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama who headed Hillary Clinton’s 2016 election campaign; Neera Tanden, a veteran of two Democratic White Houses, and former US ambassador­s to India, Tim Roemer and Richard Verma.

The Congress leader also had a meeting with the US-India Business Council, an advocacy group promoting stronger business ties between the two countries, and then another one with a group of conservati­ves, organised by the Heritage Foundation and American Foreign Policy Council.

Republican senator Corey Gardner dropped by during this meeting, and invited Gandhi to his home-state Colorado and the Congress leader reciprocat­ed with an invitation to India.

The Congress leader also met the editorial board of The Washington Post for an off-the-record interactio­n, and will be engaging another DC think-tank, Atlantic Council, where Congress spokespers­on Manish Tewari is an associate, on Tuesday before he heads out to his next engagement.

And that is in New Jersey state’s Princeton University, an Ivy league institutio­n, where Gandhi will meet students in an interactio­n similar to the one in University of California, Berkeley, where he set the tone for a visit that has paid well for him both in the United States and, more importantl­y, in India.

 ?? TWITTER ?? (LR) Telecom expert Sam Pitroda, Congress vicepresid­ent Rahul Gandhi, Governor of Virginia Terry McAuliffe and Congress leader Sachin Deora in Virginia, USA on Tuesday.
TWITTER (LR) Telecom expert Sam Pitroda, Congress vicepresid­ent Rahul Gandhi, Governor of Virginia Terry McAuliffe and Congress leader Sachin Deora in Virginia, USA on Tuesday.

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