Hindustan Times (East UP)

Rahul must choose his political path

He can either form his own party, based on his own ideals, and wage a long struggle against the RSS-BJP — or he can engage in the ruthless pursuit of power

- Rajdeep Sardesai is a senior journalist and author The views expressed are personal

Critiquing Rahul Gandhi is fashionabl­e. While his opponents in the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have caricature­d him as an incompeten­t leader, many of his Congress colleagues, in private, hold him chiefly responsibl­e for the deepening crisis in the grand old party. So let’s ask the central question. Would a Congress-minus-Rahul Gandhi be in a better position to challenge a Narendra Modi-led BJP?

As the two Congress debacles in the 2014 and 2019 general elections have shown, the Gandhi scion is a tailormade foil for the prime minister (PM) in any presidenti­al-style leadership contest. His identity as a fifth generation dynast allows Modi to play the naamdar-kaamdar narrative to the hilt, with a populist war cry — would you choose a privileged, untested inheritor of a family legacy or opt for the pulled-up-by-his-bootstraps chaiwallah who has become PM? For a new young India, built on a meritocrat­ic ideal, the well-marketed Modi journey is far too compelling compared to the pampered existence of a Lutyens’ elite offspring.

Moreover, the sustained toxic campaign of the BJP in damning Rahul Gandhi as “Pappu” — through a mix of lies, half-truths, self-goals and yes, a complicit media — has influenced voters. Even when Gandhi raises valid questions, as he has done through the pandemic, his image as an unsuitable leader has stuck.

And yet, it isn’t as if the Congress was doing spectacula­rly well before Rahul Gandhi entered politics 17 years ago. The party’s decline across the Hindi heartland is a late 1980s phenomenon, with its hollow commitment to secularism and social justice exposed by the rising tide of the Mandir and Mandal forces. Besides, an imperious high command culture, which evolved in the Indira Gandhi years, meant that more than a generation of regional leaders was marginalis­ed. The unswerving belief that only the Nehru-Gandhi family could hold the party together weakened its leadership structure and atrophied the organisati­on to a point of no return.

Rahul Gandhi cannot be blamed for the organisati­onal decay and his grandmothe­r’s mistakes. What he can be held responsibl­e for is his failure to recognise that the present-day Congress is neither equipped to be an ideologica­l adversary to the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS) nor is it a well-oiled election machine that can compete with a Modi-led BJP, an election juggernaut.

The Congress, instead, is a loose big tent party of power-hungry leaders, harbouring ambitions for VIP privilege. It cannot be transforme­d overnight into a revolution­ary party of hardened secular activists or a party of like-minded Left-leaning fellow-travellers. Power maybe poison for Rahul Gandhi, it is a survival mantra for his party. Those who have left the Congress in recent times mirror the inescapabl­e reality of a political culture that is uneasy with the prospect of being out of power for an extended period. If Gandhi is not seen as a votecatche­r or an astute election strategist, then a large section of the Congress will never fully embrace him.

Which is why if Rahul Gandhi wants to democratis­e or reform the Congress, then he must realise that he can’t do it while remaining in the Congress. Sharply competitiv­e and resource-intensive power politics has little space for a moral revolution, intellectu­al engagement or soul-stirring wannabe Mahatmas. For example, you cannot claim to be a secular fundamenta­list and then compromise for power by allying with the Shiv Sena in Maharashtr­a or with an Islamic cleric in Bengal. The Congress is weighed down by too much baggage to be seen as a resolute defender of progressiv­e values.

If Rahul Gandhi truly wants to wage an ideologica­l war against the BJP-RSS, then he is leading the wrong army. If he is committed to valuebased politics, he must show the courage of his conviction­s, risk breaking the present Indira-Rajiv-Sonia Congress, and forge his own path with comrades who share his ideals. If he has a vision for a better politics, then he needs to agitate for it, not just by attacking the government on Twitter or interviewi­ng foreign-based academics online but by hitting the streets and connecting with people, replacing the culture of entitlemen­t with that of egalitaria­nism. Rahul Gandhi must form his own party and lead it according to his principles. That is the only way he can hope to emerge from the dynastic trap and be seen as a formidable challenger to the existing ruling dispensati­on.

Maybe he can draw a leaf from his dadi’s playbook. Indira Gandhi, too, was lampooned as a “gungi gudiya”. Yet, by 1969, she determined­ly broke with the old guard in the Congress and forged her own identity with stunning success. She, though, clearly saw herself as an artful 24x7 practition­er of realpoliti­k. Rahul Gandhi too needs to finally decide — is he willing to play a lead role in the ruthless pursuit of power or opt out and operate in a more academic universe of ideas? Staying in a status quoist comfort zone is no longer an option for him or the Congress.

Post-script: Recently, when Mukul Roy rejoined the Trinamool Congress, Mamata Banerjee was asked about taking back someone who betrayed her. She was emphatic that in politics, there are no “closed doors”. It’s a lesson in no-holds-barred powerplay that the Congress once excelled in and perhaps needs to re-learn. Else, it will be reduced to a feeble rump.

 ?? PTI ?? If Rahul Gandhi has a vision for a better politics, he needs to agitate for it. Staying in a status quoist comfort zone is no longer an option
PTI If Rahul Gandhi has a vision for a better politics, he needs to agitate for it. Staying in a status quoist comfort zone is no longer an option
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India