Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Rahul awaits Congress big job

Sports Page 11

- By Adam PLOWRIGHT

NEW DELHI, (AFP) - The path is clear for India's Gandhi family scion Rahul to become the Congress party's next prime ministeria­l candidate, following premier Manmohan Singh's announceme­nt Friday that he will step down before this year's polls.

Rahul, 43, is already number two in the Congress, behind his mother Sonia who is party president, and he is chief strategist for the national elections.

The party originally had no plans to declare its candidate for the top job before voting, but newspapers are now speculatin­g that Rahul will be promoted as early at a meeting on January 17.

Congress faces a resurgent opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), running a successful campaign centered on its candidate Narendra Modi.

Media- shy bachelor Rahul has no ministeria­l experience and has never sought a government job, but his elevation is seen internally as a natural progressio­n in a party dominated by his family.

However, the son, grandson and great-grandson of former prime ministers faces a difficult task in turning around the fortunes of Congress in the upcoming polls and doubts still remain about his appetite for the job.

He accepted the position of number two in the party in January last year, raising hopes he would play a larger public role in setting policy and prior- ities.

But since then he has only intermitte­ntly taken the spotlight and Congress suffered a string of state election defeats in the final months of 2013 despite him being projected as the party's new face.

As Congress MPs face stinging reverses in the polls, dissent is reportedly mounting although none has had the courage to publicly question his anointment or propose rival candidates.

"My frustratio­n is that he is too forward-looking. He is talking of structure, systems," said Rural Developmen­t Minister Jairam Ramesh last year in the most critical public comments to date.

In a rare moment of public leadership, Rahul wrong-footed the entire government and publicly contradict­ed Singh in September by denouncing the government's intention to move a decree to shield lawmakers convicted of corruption.

Since taking up senior roles in the party, Rahul has mostly focused on building up the youth wing and has talked broadly about the need to refresh and rebuild the party.

Rahul, who was 20 when his father and former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi was killed, has lived in a cocoon of security for much of his life.

"My grandmothe­r and father were assassinat­ed and tomorrow I also may get killed; but I just don't care," Rahul told a state election rally in October.

He was educated in India and at Harvard and Cambridge, and first worked in business manage- ment in London before winning the family constituen­cy seat of Amethi in Uttar Pradesh state in 2004.

He holds few news conference­s, gives almost no interviews and speaks mostly at carefully-controlled appearance­s, either at election rallies or in remote and poor villages.

Still unmarried, and with no acknowledg­ed girlfriend, Rahul is occasional­ly spotted in upmarket Delhi restaurant­s, at sports events sitting with ordinary fans, and even riding the metro -- always surrounded by armed guards.

US diplomatic cables released by the Wikileaks website described him as "an empty suit" when he became an MP in 2004.

"He will need to get his hands dirty in the untidy and ruthless business that is Indian politics," it said.

Instead, Rahul has remained largely above the fray, protecting his humble and serious image.

"Whether I will become prime minister, this an irrelevant question -- it's all smoke," he told business leaders last April, adding his goal was to "help one billion people find their voices".

Creating puzzlement when he referred to releasing India's "beehive" energies, he also said he was "not the guy on the horse who will charge through India and everything in India will be fixed."

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