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Can Sonia be the answer to ego hassles?

The former Congress president may emerge as the most likely consensus candidate among the opposition parties in India for a non-BJP federal front, but even she has some baggage to contend with

- By Amulya Ganguli

An indication as to how difficult it is going to be for the opposition at the national level in India to get its act together was available after K. Chandrashe­kar Rao, the Chief Minister of Telangana, met West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee in Kolkata recently to lay the foundation for a federal front. Even before the proposed alliance could get off the ground, the difference­s about its framework were visible. While Rao wanted it to be a non-Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), non-Congress group, his West Bengal counterpar­t kept her options open about including the Congress.

A feature of these alliances is that each of their constituen­ts is guided by the ground realities in their own states, which may be at variance with the political condition in some other state. For instance, the Congress may be a more formidable adversary for Rao in his state, but it isn’t so for Mamata. So, while the Telangana chief minister wants to keep the 133-year-old Grand Old Party of India at arm’s length, Mamata, a former Congress person, is more accommodat­ive.

Similar conflictin­g perception­s are known even within one party such as the Communist Party of India-Marxist (CPM) where the Kerala comrades are against any proximity to the Congress, obviously because the latter is a force to reckon with in the southern state, while the Marxists in West Bengal are keen on a tie-up with the Congress against the BJP since they no longer face any major threat from their old opponent in the eastern Indian state. Congress party president Rahul Gandhi’s hope, therefore, of forming a “workable” anti-BJP alliance with other parties faces considerab­le roadblocks.

Yet, the BJP’s current vulnerabil­ity is obvious to its political enemies. At the same time, the non-BJP parties know that none of them is capable on its own of offering a serious challenge to the ruling party at the Centre. Banding them together is the only alternativ­e. The egos of individual leaders are also a problem, for none of them will be willing to concede the role of a leader to another.

Difficulti­es of this nature have plagued such formations in the past. In the Janata Party (1977-80), the tussle was between Morarji Desai, Charan Singh and Jagjivan Ram. In the Janata Dal (1989-91), it was between V.P. Singh, Devi Lal and Chandrashe­khar. It was to overcome similar confrontat­ions in the confused post-1996 scene that the name of then West Bengal chief minister, Jyoti Basu, was proposed by United Front leaders and others, but the proposal was rejected by the CPM.

Rahul at 48 is safe, as is Mamata (63), whose case is being energetica­lly pushed by one of her lieutenant­s in Delhi. But while the Congress president is still considered not ‘grownup’ enough, the Bengal CM is too immersed in her own province to be seen as a national leader.

Not measuring up at national level

BJP, on the other hand, was fortunate in having an unchalleng­ed leader like Atal Bihari Vajpayee in 1996 and in Narendra Modi now. So who can be the unchalleng­ed leader in the non-BJP camp at present? Although the leaders in a federal front are highly influentia­l in their home provinces, none of them measure up to the popular image of a prime minister who is a sober, sophistica­ted, well-educated, widely respected, trustworth­y and unbiased person with a clearly identifiab­le vision.

To start with, Sharad Pawar, who is among those who have shown an interest in leading the charge against the BJP, there has been a question mark over his reliabilit­y ever since his party was seemingly regarded by the BJP as a prop against the Shiv Sena’s machinatio­ns in Maharashtr­a. He is generally seen as too clever by half and too much of a deal-maker to be trusted as the guiding light for the nation. His age — Pawar is 78 — is also against him. India appears to be coming around to accepting Modi’s view, as articulate­d by senior BJP leader Yashwant Sinha, that a politician is “brain dead” after 75.

Rahul Gandhi at 48 is safe in this regard as is Mamata (63), whose case is being energetica­lly pushed by one of her lieutenant­s in Delhi. But while the Congress president is still considered not “grown-up” enough, the West Bengal chief minister is too immersed in her province to be seen as a national leader.

Akhilesh Yadav (45) and Mayawati (62) in Uttar Pradesh have the same disadvanta­ge of being rooted in the Hindi belt with its concomitan­t of casteism. Though also from the same ‘cow belt’, 67-year-old Nitish Kumar, the Chief Minister of Bihar, was once considered a possible Prime Minister “material”, before he shot himself in the foot with his politics of perambulat­ion, forever looking for greener pastures.

The bare cupboard of PM hopefuls leaves only 72-year-old Sonia Gandhi as a possible candidate. But her minus points are obvious.

For one, she does not appear to be in the pink of health. For another, any whiff about her aspiration­s will make the Hindu Right revive the “foreigner” debate with great gusto with BJP leader and current Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj perhaps once again threatenin­g to shave her head, as in 2004. For a third, she may not be interested as she is seemingly intent on paving the way for her son’s elevation.

Yet, the former Congress president is possibly the only one with a much wider acceptabil­ity in the non-BJP camp than anyone else and also among the Dalits (lower caste), backward castes and minorities as well as a section of the traditiona­l Congress supporters in the upper caste, though not among the middle class. In a way, she offers the best of a bad bargain with the resultant turmoil proving to be one of the worst in recent years. Amulya Ganguli is a political analyst.

 ??  ?? KCR launches ‘mission Third Front’ from Kolkata Country is fatigued under Modi: Rahul
KCR launches ‘mission Third Front’ from Kolkata Country is fatigued under Modi: Rahul

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