Deccan Chronicle

Rashtrapat­i has set very high standards

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President Pranab Mukherjee’s address at a conclave in Mumbai on Friday attests to our First Citizen’s status as an enlightene­d politician and statesman who has hit the final stretch of the road. Mr Mukherjee’s tenure ends in July this year. Will there be a second term? That’s in the realm of speculatio­n. After the BJP’s sweeping victories in the recent Assembly polls in Uttar Pradesh and elsewhere, that will bolster its numbers in the electoral college for the presidency, there may be every likelihood that the saffron party will throw its weight behind someone from the RSS stable for Rashtrapat­i Bhavan, and not look at a good man. That’s the way of political logic. Unlike some of his predecesso­rs, Mr Mukherjee has the distinctio­n of skillfully guiding the country through government­s run by his own former party, the Congress, and the BJP, which is the polar opposite and bitter contestant of the Congress ideology and legacy, at a time when the saffron party has emerged as the dominant pole in Indian politics under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

This couldn’t have been an easy part to play. What seems to have animated Mr Mukherjee’s official conduct is his abiding faith in our Constituti­on, of which he has continuall­y offered proof through his timely articulati­ons when Hindutva brigades appeared to have a free run. Reflecting on his long, distinguis­hed innings at the Mumbai event, the President confessed to being an admirer and emulator of Pandit Nehru, our first Prime Minister, whom he never met, and acknowledg­ed Indira Gandhi, who he regards to be an extraordin­ary articulato­r of power among the politician­s he has known, was “virtually my mentor”, although he had no hesitation in making a public criticism of the Emergency and referring to Mrs Gandhi’s “mistakes” in the exercise of power.

The President’s strong Congress antecedent­s didn’t stop him from heaping political and personal praise on two BJP Prime Ministers — Atal Behari Vajpayee and Mr Modi (though the latter has been around just three years and hasn’t faced the daunting odds of some of his most distinguis­hed predecesso­rs), showing that he can be even-handed with deftness.

Mr Mukherjee also had words of solicitude for Prime Ministers Manmohan Singh and P.V. Narsasimha Rao. He offered no comments, however, on Rajiv Gandhi, other than to say that he had worked with the country’s youngest PM only “briefly”.

Politics at the top is a high-stakes game that needs imaginatio­n, boldness and nerves of steel. Mr Mukherjee has adroitly displayed all of that, along with a capacity for excavating consensus even from impossible situations.

Politics at the top is a high-stakes game that needs boldness and nerves of steel. Mr Mukherjee has adroitly displayed all of that along with a capacity for excavating consensus

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