Rahul should be asked to behave his age
It’s now
almost a year since we came to know about Robert Vadra’s business in the real
estate sector; that he was blessed with powers to turn fallow land expensive.
And one has not heard the young Rahul Gandhi speak out his mind on all that
about Vadra and his shady business deals. If only the scion had chosen to speak
his mind, the Congress Chief Minister of Haryana would not have done anything
to hound Ashok Kemka and Rahu’s sister’s husband would have landed in one of
the jails in Haryana or in the Tihar.
The way in
which the Congress party has behaved after Rahul Gandhi said that the ordinance
nullifying the Supreme Court made law – that those convicted shall not be
allowed to stay in office and not even as MPs or MLAs – makes one look upon him
as the messiah of a nation. It is ridiculous to see Congressmen, including
members of the Union Cabinet, speaking out against a cabinet resolution. It is
no use talking of the impropriety in Cabinet ministers dissociating from a
decision that was theirs. Propriety is a cry in wilderness.
Well. Rahul
Gandhi’s theatrics reminds of his grandmother doing similar things in 1969. In
her quest for supremacy within the party, Indira Gandhi, as Prime Minister,
went about defying her party president and other leaders in the Congress
Working Committee. She first tried to foist Jagjiwan Ram, one of her partisans
in the Working Committee as the party’s candidate for the presidential
elections. She then recommended an ordinance nationalising 14 private sector
banks to irritate and thus ease out Morarji Desai from her cabinet.
And as days went by, she
orchestrated a demand for conscience vote in the presidential elections and
took the fight against her party leaders, including the party president S.Nijalingappa, to a point of no return. And by all these she
ensured the defeat of the party’s presidential candidate and the victory of her
own nominee, contesting as independent, as President of the Republic. V.V.Giri
returned the favour by issuing a presidential order (even while he knew that it
was not in order) abolishing the Privy Purses; this was after the legislation
to that effect was lost in the Rajya Sabha for want of a single vote!
Lest it is mistaken, there is
very little similar between Rahul Gandhi and Indira Gandhi notwithstanding that
the former gathers his importance only because he was born to Indira Gandhi’s
son. Indira Gandhi, even if she had risen due to her father helping her
immensely, did have a mind of her own. She had scripted every line of her acts.
Rahul Gandhi, on the contrary, is innocent of any such things. Saying that he
is innocent does not mean that he is unaware of Robert Vadra and his business.
If those who are privy to the nature of
Rahul’s relationship with Robert are to be believed, they know each
other too well and hence there is no reason to think that the young
vice-president of the party is unaware of things.
It should, hence, be inferred
that Rahul Gandhi did not really mean to cleanse the body politic when he said
that the ordinance in question should be dumped. It was just that he reacted
without thinking. He had done this before. Notwithstanding his own government’s
policy on themines and minerals front,
he went to Orissa and said few
things against mining in the Niyamgiri hills; the point is that he had nothing
to say against similar destruction taking place in Andhra Pradesh, Goa or
Maharashtra. In any case, the unintended consequence of his statement from
Orissa was that all the King’s men joined the chorus and the hills were saved
of destruction! One must thank Rahul Gandhi, even if he did not intend anything
of that kind.
Likewise, there is reason to
celebrate his condemnation of the ordinance. Unintended it may be, the fact that
the Congressmen in the cabinet have joined the chorus should render hope to the
hopeless in our midst that convicts will be forced to stay out of positions in
Parliament, Legisltive Assemblies and ministries. That the law, as set by the
Supreme Court, will not face the same fate as
did the law that divorced muslim women shall have the right to
maintenance. Rahul Gandhi’s father had upset the court’s decision in the Shah
Bano case and put the clock back. Rahul Gandhi deserves praise for ensuring
that the consensus among the parties – all the parties had wanted and continue
to want the apex court’s decision to be nullified – was no hurdle in cleansing
the system.
One must, hence, hope for a
similar knee jerk response from the young vice-president of the Congress party
to declare, even if in a huff, that those who grab land for cheap and make a
lot of money selling that, hand in glove with builders and realtors must be
dealt with in accordance with the law, however mighty they are and whoever they
are related to. This will do the country a lot of good and posterity will
remember Rahul Gandhi for doing what many others failed to do.
Such cynicism is not good for
democracy. The concept of collective responsibility, which is the cornerstone
of a cabinet system, ought to be preserved. Dissent in the open is important.
But what we saw after Rahul Gandhi did and the way he did that does not fit
into any scheme. He is old enough to be told that politics is a serious
business. Not the same as scoring points in a debate completion for students of
upper primary classes. It is impossible to desist from saying this; recall
Rahul’s speech in defence of nuclear power invoking Kalawati!
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