The Sunday Guardian

Rahul at LSE talked of removing BJP as his first priority

Gandhi said the 2019 elections would be a straightfo­rward BJP vs the entire Opposition.

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Indian institutio­ns ( justice, journalism) needed defending, ditto the inclusive idea of India. He added that because of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar it would be difficult for BJP to win the election.

Throughout he referred to the Congress as an institutio­n, likening the institutio­n to a tool, which, under his stewardshi­p, could empower people.

Gandhi said Congress and RSS were old ideas that have been in combat for years. He claimed that the RSS vision was top to bottom, where knowledge was centralise­d; on the other hand, Congress was a decentrali­sed structure where knowledge was available to everyone, with the aim to reduce hierarchy and bring government to the people. But he believed the RSS was better at articulati­ng its message. He said Congress used to rely on “Gandhiji” and the leaders of the freedom struggle and that the party had not kept up the pace. He returned to the theme of the Congress wanting to protect the vulnerable and attract the youth. Then he alluded to the value of senior people by saying, “You can’t break the past so the present has to be a merger between the present and the past.” He praised the work of Sachin Pilot in Rajasthan.

The audience applauded when he said that 10-12 Indian MPs were helping run Britain from the same room in Parliament that Britain had run India from.

Regarding 1984 he said, Manmohan Singh spoke for all of Congress. He condemned all violence and said he was 100% for punishment of the people involved.

Banerjee asked if his personal vision of non-violence could become a part of how Congress managed communalis­m under his stewardshi­p. He answered, “Unquestion­ably.”

Banerjee’s final question was about a possible PM candidate if Congress did not get a majority. Gandhi said the first priority was to remove the BJP and that Congress would work with parties ideologica­lly aligned. Their manifesto was a work in progress.

When a student questioned him about fighting corruption, Gandhi chose the RTI Act as the single most powerful instrument, followed by Lokpal and Panchayati Raj. He swiftly moved to the Rafale deal, which he claimed, went to Anil Ambani magically. He complained that the media was not picking it up.

Rahul Gandhi, though he seemed affable, perhaps did not have the desired impact on the audience. The consensus amongst some spoken to following the event was that he had not reached the level of maturity and gravitas to be Prime Minister, yet.

In the Houses of Parliament, Rahul Gandhi addressed some Labour MPs including Seema Malhotra, Keith Vaz and Virendra Sharma and Congress’ Diaspora supporters. Many were surprised at IISS when Gandhi likened the RSS to the banned terrorist outfit Muslim Brotherhoo­d. He also said he did not have sufficient details about Doklam to say how he could have handled it differentl­y. Observers of body language might have taken note of Manish Tewari’s apparent discomfort.

At LSE, Rahul Gandhi appeared relaxed and in his comfort zone with the young, neverthele­ss he was fidgety with his right foot.

On Saturday Gandhi was to speak at the Royal Society of Medicine with Dr Sudhakar and Dr Vinod Metta regarding important issues facing British and Indian healthcare.

It is not known if Gandhi met with any ministers from the Conservati­ve government.

 ??  ?? Rahul Gandhi at the London School of Economics on Friday. On the left is Mukulika Banerjee of LSE.
Rahul Gandhi at the London School of Economics on Friday. On the left is Mukulika Banerjee of LSE.

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