A prospective PM cannot be a part-timer
Saturday January 05, 2013 08:54:29 PM,
Amulya Ganguli, IANS
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By disappearing during the
widespread popular protests in Delhi against the gang-rape and
death of a 23-year-old paramedical student, Rahul Gandhi hasn't
done his prime ministerial chances any good.
The upheaval posed a major challenge to the government and the
party, forcing them to appoint a committee to stiffen the penal
provisions on rape, and another to probe the lapses into the
police response to the barbaric incident. Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh and Congress president Sonia Gandhi also broke with protocol
to go to the airport to receive the girl's body when it was flown
in from Singapore.
But, even as the country was exercised not only over the brutal
incident but also over the rising cases of violence against women,
the heir apparent, who has been widely touted as the person to
replace Manmohan Singh in 2014, was nowhere to be seen. He only
issued a brief message of condolence from behind the scenes before
falling silent even as the turmoil continued with the tragic
incident being discussed night after night on television and the
ruling party fending off the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party's (BJP)
demand for a special session of parliament.
Rahul's absence was felt all the more because it was the younger
generation which played a leading role in expressing outrage over
the tragedy and the seemingly tardy official and political
response as well as the earlier callousness of the establishment
towards the deteriorating social scene.
As boys and girls, usually in their mid-twenties, cried "we want
justice" and held candlelight vigils braving the intense cold, it
was felt that the young among the Congress politicians would have
been better placed to reach out to the protesters unlike the
80-year-old prime minister, whose somewhat wooden television
address was marred by a faux pas at the end when he asked the
camera persons whether everything went off well - "theek hai?" he
asked.
What Rahul's absence showed at a time when the entire central
vista of the national capital was sealed to keep out the
protesters was his lack of interest in playing a key role in
politics and administration. A few months ago, a union minister
had ruefully said that the young general secretary had been
playing only a few "cameo roles" instead of being more proactive.
But, this time, he did not enter the stage at all.
When Rahul had earlier failed to respond to the prime minister's
call to join the union cabinet, it was suspected that he did not
want to be a minister among ministers when he was not only seen as
a natural successor to Manmohan Singh but had even said in 2007
that he could have become prime minister himself if he had "wanted
to". But, now, it appears that Rahul has lost interest even in his
chosen profession.
There may be two reasons for such indifference. One is that having
risen to a No.2 position in the party by virtue of his lineage
and, therefore, without having to strike for it, his political
instincts have been dulled. The other is that he may have been
disheartened by some of the failures in his political forays,
notably in Uttar Pradesh, and earlier in Bihar, and more recently
in Gujarat, which shows that he lacks the Nehru-Gandhi family's
match-winning charisma.
There may be a third reason, which is that Rahul is not a
political animal. Politics is not his natural arena, which
explains why he does not attend parliament regularly. He has been
pushed into the field by his mother for the sake of continuing the
family's traditional occupation. But he remains a debutant who
shows no signs of becoming a mature player. As much is evident
from his desultory efforts to carve out a path of his own, but
with no clear idea of what he wants to achieve.
Hence his exercises in slumming, as it were, when he spent a night
or two in Dalit homes with a bottle of mineral water and then lost
interest in whatever he had in mind. Or his endeavours to
democratize the party by favouring internal elections, which can
seem strange for someone who is the prime beneficiary of a feudal
culture to try to do.
The fact that he hasn't spelt out his political outlook with
regard to, say, the economic reforms may not be due only to
Manmohan Singh and Sonia Gandhi not always being on the same page
on the subject. Instead, his silence can be attributed to his
being basically a dilettante who hasn't cared to formulate his
views.
He did support the Indo-US nuclear deal in 2008 and foreign
investment in the retail sector recently. But these were one-off
interventions instead of being part of a comprehensive world-view.
A prospective prime minister cannot be a part-timer who is heard
and seen occasionally even if his party is cheering him on. He may
still make it to the top, but the rest of the country will look
upon his ascent with scepticism in the wake of his latest
disappearing act.
Amulya Ganguli is a political analyst. He can be
reached at amulyaganguli@gmail.com
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