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archive: Anonymous leader

Anonymous leader

Editorial
The Economic Times
May 26, 1999


    Title: Anonymous leader
    Author: Editorial
    Publication: The Economic Times 
    Date: May 26, 1999
    
    Ms Sonia Gandhi's predictable withdrawal of her resignation as
    Congress president has ended a week-long drama.  But sadly none of the
    issues involved has been addressed.  It is ironic that in moving the
    resolution thanking Ms Gandhi for agreeing to stay on as president, Mr
    S C Jamir should have also called for inner party democracy.  For, the
    manner in which Ms Gandhi herself and the Congress as a whole reacted
    to the letter written by Mr Sharad Pawar, Mr P A Sangma and Mr Tariq
    Anwar betrayed scant respect for democratic norms.  The party was, as
    we have said earlier, right in rejecting the view that Ms Gandhi
    should be disqualified from running for prime minister merely because
    she was born an Italian.  However, that does not mean that Congressmen
    were justified in dubbing anybody who raised the issue a traitor or in
    manhandling Congress Working Committee members for suggesting milder
    action against the dissident trio.  The right stance may have been
    adopted on the issue of Ms Gandhi's foreign origin, but it would have
    carried greater conviction if it had been arrived at after a debate
    rather than by avoiding one.
    
    Ms Gandhi would still do well to heed Mr Jamir's advice not to
    surround herself with a coterie.  She would also be well advised to
    recognise that anybody aspiring to leadership in a democratic polity
    must be open to scrutiny by the people.  Whether the mystique that
    surrounded Ms Gandhi for all these years after her widowhood was a
    care-fully cultivated political image or just a personal trait is of
    little consequence.  What must be recognised is that the mystique will
    now have to be shed.  If India is being asked to accept Ms Gandhi as a
    leader (even if not as prime minister yet), it is entitled to know
    what she stands for.  Knowing her merely as Indira Gandhi's
    daughter-in-law or Rajiv Gandhi's widow cannot suffice.  Ms Gandhi in
    her speech to the AICC session has called upon Congressmen to stick by
    principles.  Unexceptionable as this demand is, she must spell out
    what those principles are.  The veil must be dropped.
    



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