The Free Press Journal

Tact, intellect behind Pranab’s glorious run

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Former President Pranab Mukherjee, 84, who died on Monday from Covid-19-related complicati­ons, was rightly described as a man for all seasons. He had this extraordin­ary knack of befriendin­g leaders across the entire spectrum of politics. Rising from a teacher in a district college, he attained almost everything there was by way of elective office, through his excellent rapport with generation­s of leaders in his own Congress Party and, later, with the leaders of the non-Congress parties as well. The only high office which he wanted desperatel­y but which remained out of his reach was the Prime Minister’s. Sonia Gandhi preferred a political novice, Manmohan Singh, rather than the veteran and widely-experience­d pipe-smoking professor from Bengal. He had earned her distrust due to a misunderst­anding stemming from his stated wish to become PM following Indira Gandhi’s assassinat­ion. Sonia was determined to have her husband installed in the prime ministeria­l 'gaddi'. After a short stint outside the Congress umbrella, he returned to his alma mater, and soon occupied key ministries. In this, he was helped by the head of a corporate group which had `cultivated’ Mukherjee from the time he first became a deputy minister for industrial developmen­t, way back in the 70s. The relationsh­ip between the corporate house and Mukherjee proved beneficial for both. Having held all the key portfolios in several Congress government­s and with Prime Minister’s post unavailabl­e, Mukherjee sought the President’s post. Sonia was not enthusiast­ic, determined on Hamid Ansari, with an eye on the Muslim vote with the added advantage of keeping out the man whom she least trusted. Thanks to Mamata Banerjee and Mulayam Singh Yadav, Mukherjee occupied the highest constituti­onal office in the land despite Sonia. In his last years, he came particular­ly close to the leaders of the RSS-BJP, controvers­ially becoming the chief guest at a RSS event in Nagpur.

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