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archive: Resigned to rule

Resigned to rule

Editorial
The Times of India
May 26, 1999


    Title: Resigned to rule
    Author: Editorial
    Publication: The Times of India
    Date: May 26, 1999
    
    By withdrawing her resignation, Mrs Sonia Gandhi has made it explicit
    that she has bowed to the overwhelming sentiment in favour of her
    continuing as Congress president.  What is disquieting about the whole
    episode is not that so many Congressmen share each other's view - not
    so much because unanimity has the knack of degenerating into
    uniformity - but the probability that noble sentiment is being faked. 
    Congressmen for long have devised all kinds of detours, piled up lies,
    pulled the strings of their semi-nepotic connections and arranged
    shady deals with the leader of the day in order to survive.  Hence, no
    party president can afford to turn his or her back from preserving and
    perpetuating this legacy by going into a prolonged sulk.  What, then,
    remains of the resignation saga is for political commentators to
    continue to speculate about the reasons and timing for Mrs Gandhi's
    sudden decision.  There were legitimate fears that the collective
    wrath of the rank and file of the party might once again fall on
    senior leaders of the party at the AICC session resulting in torn
    clothes and broken bones.  Also, to leave the AICC session without the
    last remaining mascot of the party might have emboldened closet
    rebels.  Factions within the party would have vied with each other for
    the guardianship of the grand old party in absence of the glue that
    perilously binds them together.  Instead, the AICC has hailed the
    saviour and pledged eternal allegiance to the first family and the
    totemic symbol of the Congress.  The Congress banners on the streets
    leading to the AICC venue said it all: You love India, and we love you
    too.
    
    In a speech that was meant to tug at the heartstrings of Congressmen
    and voters alike, Mrs Sonia Gandhi sent an unequivocal message that
    since she did not doubt her own loyalty to this country, all those who
    were questioning her allegiance to the Indian soil had no place in the
    party.  In a dramatic invocation of the life-cycle of a woman, Mrs
    Gandhi observed that she was married in this country, her children
    were born here, it is here that she became a widow.  As if this was
    not sufficient expression of her fidelity to the idea of India, after
    seven years of self-imposed political exile she had entered politics
    to uphold secularism and fight communalism.  Not only has Mrs Gandhi
    managed to put the stamp of her supremacy over the Congress, she has
    also brought into sharp focus the central election issue the party
    will use against the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance.  If handing
    over the top posts of the country to individuals of foreign origins
    militates against the spirit of India, Mrs Gandhi seems to be arguing,
    then, communalism is equally alien to the essence of India.  Beyond
    doubt, the Congress has been given a fresh lease of life with Mrs
    Gandhi's return.  Actual and potential rebels will find it hard to
    counter the emotional rhetoric of the Congress president.  Meanwhile,
    the stage is now finally set for what is going to prove a bitter,
    divisive and issueless election.
    



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