India’s Rahul Gandhi takes helm of Congress party to challenge Modi – English-BanglaNewsUs
  • নিউইয়র্ক, রাত ১১:৪৮, ২৪শে মে, ২০২৬ খ্রিস্টাব্দ


India’s Rahul Gandhi takes helm of Congress party to challenge Modi

bnewsus
Published December 12, 2017
India’s Rahul Gandhi takes helm of Congress party to challenge Modi

India’s main opposition Congress party on Monday elevated Rahul Gandhi, the scion of the country’s most fabled political dynasty, as its president, preparing to challenge the dominance of Prime Minister Narendra Modi ahead of national polls in 2019.

 

In a long-awaited move, Gandhi, the great-grandson of India’s founding prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru, was elected unopposed to head the party. He will take the reins from his mother Sonia, the party’s longest-serving president, since 1998.

 

Calling it a “historic occasion”, the Congress party said Gandhi would take charge as president on Dec 16.

 

Television broadcast images of party supporters celebrating and distributing sweets outside Congress offices in the capital, New Delhi, and the financial hub of Mumbai.

 

 

This 2015 photos shows Sonia Gandhi (left) and her son Rahul Gandhi arriving at a court in New Delhi, India. Reuters

 

Gandhi’s ascent coincides with state polls in Modi’s western home state of Gujarat that are shaping as a test for the prime minister, who has been facing criticism for softening economic growth and poor implementation of a nationwide sales tax.

The Congress hopes a round of state elections offers the party, and Gandhi, a shot at revival ahead of the next national elections, due in 2019.

 

Modi’s depiction of Gandhi as an undeserving “prince” has helped sideline Gandhi since the last national election, during which time Congress has suffered some of its worst results in local elections.

 

The Nehru-Gandhi family has ruled the country for most of its 70 years since independence from Britain. Gandhi’s father and grandmother were both prime ministers, and both assassinated.

 

Gandhi vs Modi

 

Following Congress’ defeat in the 2014 polls, Gandhi struggled to convince voters, as well as many within his party, of his leadership skills. But senior Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad said Gandhi was now ready for the next challenge.

 

“The entire country has lots of expectations from Rahul Gandhi,” Azad said. “Much before he was elected he has shown his mettle. He knows his responsibility.”

 

 

Rahul Gandhi during an election campaign meeting for Gujarat state assembly elections in this picture taken on Dec 10, 2017. Reuters

 

Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) swiftly dismissed Gandhi’s election, saying he had become president only on the basis of “dynastic principle”.

“The new India is loath to (accept) dynastic principle and the family character of the Congress further diminishes its appeal,” BJP spokesman GVL Narasimha Rao told Reuters.

 

Gandhi, until now a vice-president of Congress, is widely seen as a prime ministerial candidate if the party returns to power one day.

 

The 47-year-old has increasingly gone public in slamming Modi’s governance since the last national polls, as he looks to shed the reticent image that has for years been synonymous with his political dynasty.

Spread the love