What does the future hold for the Gandhi dynasty?
Narendra Modi's recent landslide victory in India's general
elections, humiliated the Congress Party, the political vehicle of the
first family, the Gandhis, who have played a key role in the country
since 1947.

Rahul and his ailing mother, 67-year-old Sonia Gandhi, the
leader of the party, tendered their resignations in the wake of
the landslide electoral defeat. |
The Congress Party, long under the control of the Nehru-Gandhi
dynasty, will only have 44 MPs in the 545-member lower house of the
Indian parliament Lok Sabha, after winning 206 seats in 2009.
The family, which has produced three prime ministers, has rarely
appeared so politically impotent and forlorn as in the last few years.
After all, the Congress Party is used to being in power. The latest in
line, 43-year-old Rahul Gandhi, does not appear to be cast in the same
mould. Young voters in particular opted for Modi's promise of jobs
rather than the traditional patriarchal approach of the Gandhis, namely
patronage in the form of huge employment programs for the rural poor.
"Economic growth and social mobility have radically transformed how
younger Indians think and behave. No longer deferential or
unquestioning, they ask for evidence of Rahul Gandhi's own contribution
apart from his family lineage.
These are few", says historian Ramachandra Guha. More than anything
else, Gandhi's decision to target Narendra Modi with a negative campaign
rather than underlining his own qualities and ambition as a leader
backfired dramatically.
Rahul and his ailing mother, 67-year-old Sonia Gandhi, the leader of
the party, tendered their resignations in the wake of the landslide
electoral defeat. Rasheed Kidwai, a biographer of the family describes
the dilemma facing Congress: "If the Gandhis go, the party won't know
what to do, if they stay, the party is on its deathbed".
Not surprisingly, loyal senior party figures who simply cannot
imagine their party without the Gandhi family, immediately rejected the
offers of resignation from the party leader and her deputy.
Observers point out that senior Congress leaders are traditionally
deferential to the Gandhi clan. They offered no resistance when Sonia
Gandhi nominated Rahul as the party's lead campaigner in the elections,
a position which would have made him an automatic choice for prime
minister, had Congress prevailed.
After the scale of the defeat became known, senior party officials
were falling over each other to divert the blame for the defeat from
South Asia's first dynasty: Rahul and his mother Sonia Gandhi tendered
their resignations in the wake of the electoral defeat Kamal Nath, the
most senior MP in parliament and a member of Congress blamed the defeat
on the fact that the people had simply had it too good: "Rahul Gandhi
just came to the forefront eight months ago...we had great programs, we
were not able to get them down to the people - whether it was the right
to education, our roads program. People did not buy these things because
they thought we should be having them in any case."
With the airwaves full of excuses for the Gandhis, supporters rallied
around Rahul calling on him to stay. But senior party members like Kamal
Nath recognize that there has to be a serious analysis of what happened:
"We have got a drubbing.
This is a debacle which was unforeseen and we have to
introspect."Just where this analysis of the defeat will lead is unclear.
But faced with a revitalized and dominant BJP led by a Prime Minister
with the strongest mandate to govern in a generation, Congress has a
choice to make.
It can either stick with Rahul Gandhi and hope for better times or
open up the party to new ideas and new leaders in an effort to mount an
effective opposition until the next elections.
And therein lies the problem. The party has been run by India's first
family for decades and has failed to develop and nurture leaders at
state level.
And when it has, those leaders' wings have been clipped quickly to
prevent a challenge to the Gandhis. This means it lacks alternatives. As
Kuldeep Kumar puts it: "If you remove Sonia and Rahul, the whole
leadership structure is set to collapse. In any political party people
should rise through the ranks. Priyanka is the discovery of the campaign
on the Congress side: "She is a much more natural leader than Rahul
Gandhi, she speaks Hindi very well."
But Kuldeep Kumar does not believe a decision to replace Rahul with
Priyanka will be taken by the party, instead - as with all questions
relating to party leadership - it will be served for the Gandhi family.
"It all depends on her (Priyanka) and Sonia Gandhi, well between the two
of them whether they decide (on this course of action)," he says. Thus a
change of leadership behind closed doors would appear to be the next
logical step to take. - www.dw.de
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