Tue22052012

Compared to Rahul, Manmohan shines

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It has been an entire week since Anna Hazare broke his fast and ended the carnival of direct democracy in Delhi’s Ramlila Maidan. Yet, a week has proved to be a woefully short time for the message of the 12-day August upsurge to sink in. From Lutyens’ Delhi to Chanakyapuri, there is consternation and confusion over the impact of the stir. Will it be the proverbial Indian storm when people let the legions thunder past and plunge to sleep again? Or, will India never be the same again?

The magnitude of concern can’t be underestimated. Over the past week I have heard pillars of the Establishment first express bewilderment over Anna’s appeal and then, as the evening progressed, seen tut-tutting give way to unrestrained fulminations. As for the political class, conspiracy theories centred on RSS involvement and the lavish use of ‘foreign money’ has evolved into a robust defence of what a quasi-political functionary described to me as “Constitutional fundamentalism”. In practical terms, this has not involved a discovery of Edmund Burke but base recriminations: Slapping privilege notices and tax demands on the infamous Team Anna.

In diplomatic circles, the disorientation has been more pronounced. In the normal course it isn’t cricket to repeat conversations with diplomats. But since conversations with American diplomats can no longer be deemed either privileged or confidential thanks to WikiLeaks, I may as well reveal that representatives of the world’s only superpower are about as confused and concerned as the neighbourhood whiskey-drinking real estate speculator. Their worries were hearteningly authentic. First, why was there such a mismatch between those notables they interacted with and the angry voices they heard on TV channels? Did the media (or, at least a section of it) have a collateral agenda? However, there was a bigger worry. How have recent developments affected the political prospects of the designated heir apparent? Was the scripted future of Indian politics going awry?

The panic is understandable. Like the markets, foreign Governments and their intelligence agencies hate unpredictability. None of them had factored in the possibility (not even after the Jantar Mantar street party last April) that the UPA Government would be jolted by a middle-class uprising against corruption. Their calculation was that while the Congress was vulnerable at the State-level, a disoriented and fractious BJP would be in no position to challenge the status quo nationally. Consequently, they had devoted all their energies in cultivating the young inheritors in the Congress and the Gandhi scion they believed would lead India after 2014, if not earlier. Over the past week, they are asking themselves a simple question: Did we miscalculate?

Diplomats, being relatively more transparent, are asking a question that, for Congress leaders, is a concern they dare not spell out openly. Instead, the alarm over the unexpected turn in politics is being concealed in an inoffensive we-miss-Sonia message. But the implication of yearning for the party president whose whereabouts and state of health are covered by the Official Secrets Act is obvious. When Congress general secretary Janardan Dwivedi told a stunned country that Sonia Gandhi would be out of action for some time, he also announced the Amar-Akbar-Antony team that would help Rahul Gandhi steer the Congress ship. The buzz in Congress circles at that time was that it was only a matter of time before Rahul was anointed working president of the Congress, a prelude to the eventual assumption of complete political responsibility. The more gung-ho elements even suggested that it was only a matter of time before the unreal system of dyarchy was junked altogether because opinion polls had suggested that Rahul was the most popular choice for the Prime Minister’s post.

Unfortunately, no one in the Congress had calculated that the ship would run into choppy waters immediately. What they had also not foreseen was that in this moment of crisis Rahul would retreat into disoriented inactivity. The only evidence of Rahul’s involvement in the 12-day fire-fighting was the School Captain’s Prize Day speech he read out at Zero Hour in the Lok Sabha. Very modestly, Rahul described his intervention as the ‘game changer’. Tragically for him, the game refused to change and it was left to Pranab Mukherjee and Salman Khurshid, with some help from the BJP, to try and salvage the situation. By then, Rahul was on a flight to some unknown foreign destination.

The palpable disappointment with Rahul’s leadership potential -- and the cluelessness of the babalog brigade that constitutes his cheerleaders -- has unnerved the Congress. The Prime Minister may not have emerged from the August storm looking perfect but in a relative sense, compared to Rahul, he has emerged smelling of roses. Far from dyarchy being a liability, the Congress has to thank Manmohan Singh that the revolt of the middle-class didn’t spiral out of control. Had an inexperienced Rahul been at the helm, it is entirely possible that the spontaneous outburst of anger would not have been so regulated.

The Congress has become a private limited company owned by the Gandhi family. Confronted by the limitations of the heir apparent, it is in a state of denial. Yet the reality is apparent to everyone. The next few weeks will witness a determined bid by the Congress to salvage the reputation of its first family. This could trigger a bout of political adventurism at a time India can least afford it.

 

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Comments  

 
+3 #17 M Patel 2011-10-03 07:05
Compared to Rahul, Almost any avg. person shines. MM Singh should not be compared with Rahul but with his predecessors.
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+3 #16 NAVIN 2011-09-14 13:02
Both are equally communal born to harass majority community. Both are equal in ignoring(In other way harboring) the looting of the Nation thro' corruption.Both are enjoying at the mercy of Sonia Gandhi.As far as working is concerned,one is at ZERO level other is at -25 level.MMS cannot shine.India is not proud of MMS,Head of a corrupt Govt.India is proud of Bhagatsingh.Only the difference is,MMS is educated while Raul Vinci is not.
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+12 #15 ved 2011-09-11 07:31
Rahu is clueless. Ketu ( MMS ) is eading written speeches and defending terrorists. Diggi blaming RSS.Kapil wants Anna out. Sonia counting Swiss dollars and Italian prdos
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+4 #14 first 2011-09-11 03:28
its true bjps gain is much less than it should have been. the problem with bjp is lack of national leader. with modiji unlikely to take the leadership, thanks to the legal fouls unleashed by congress, bjp doesn't have any alternatives. arun jately and sushma swaraj are both more than enough pm material but cannot take the role of a unifying national leaders like vajpayee/advani/modi. bjp must take hard decisions. either put modi on top risking coalitions if they would go, and get rewards in 5years or create an entire new generation of leadership.
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+2 #13 Jagannath Sharma 2011-09-10 22:57
Its difficult to understand how a grand old party of stalwarts got reduced to a family concern. Equally difficult to comprehend why members of this once great party abjectly surrendered their self-respect voluntarily to one family and enthusiasticall y converted themselves into retainers and courtiers of that family. For aam aadmi like me rule of this party and its family is absolutely demeaning. Now the media is elevating this mediocre baba into the PM of a highly intelligent and mature people like ours. What a pity :-|
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+2 #12 Bhagat 2011-09-10 13:30
What is apparent is the shear arrogance of Congress Party and especially that of Rahul and his mother. That the masses of people are so eager for their 'leadership' that they will lap up any gibberish. He made a tepid speech after days of fiddling while a 74 year old man was on hunger strike and then to claim it as a 'game changer'!

He is the national symbol of what is wrong with Indian society: Inherited privilege, dynasty, and the lack of meritocracy. All the hallmarks of corruption.

It is a credit to the nation that Rahul's utterances in parliament were listened and analysed for what it was: pure wind, devoid of substance and then ignored.

If Rahul and Sonia are the patriots they claim to be; then they should act in the best interests of the nation and leave the political scene.
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+5 #11 vikram 2011-09-09 20:57
The phrase "Little knowledge is dangerous", applies appropiately to this Gandhi. How can he prove his honesty when his family's hand has been on the purse instead of the pulse of the people. He is learning the tricks of the trade under the tutelage of scums like Digvijay Singh and Kapil Sibal. I hope in next elections the opposition comes to power and all these lowly congress politicians are sent to jail, where they belong.
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+18 #10 N Chowdhury 2011-09-08 04:59
Is it 5 years yet? lets get these morons packing with next LS elections. There should be no Ifs and buts. BJP has to and needs to come back.
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+11 #9 sailendra misra 2011-09-07 21:18
Swapan,well done! Rahul's grand idea of making Lokpal a ' Donnesque picture ' of Election Commissioner! Why is kapil hiding?
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+15 #8 Jitendra Desai 2011-09-06 12:36
Lokaukta foisted on Gujarat is one such adventurism.ED notices to Baba Ramdev is another.Digvijay Sigh's diatribes is another.Expect very soon, very strident debates on Communal violence bill.
Congress is genuinely rattled by the way people are reacting to its actions [or non actions] Adventurism is the only recourse left to a cabal that has only "commitment to secularism" is the only achievement left, to show to the people in its 7 years of misrule.
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