Someone without any credentials gets
job in a particular company only because his parents are majority shareholders.
Within three years of joining, he is straightaway made the general manager of
the organization. He is also given the
responsibility to manage some of company’s subsidiaries. He fails miserably
here, and is unable to get a single credible achievement under his belt. In spite of this, when the company embarks on
a very critical project later on, he is given full responsibility and authority
to handle the same. Again he doesn’t deliver, and all the efforts fall flat on
face. Instead of demanding accountability and doing a serious introspection, he
is again directly promoted to the position of Vice Chairman. By this time
everybody knows that he would be treated differently and would not be
scrutinized by the same standards that are applicable to ordinary employees. As
a vice chairman he is not only
unsuccessful in accomplishing anything substantial but also regularly defies top
management including the CEO. Still the company entrusts him with another very
critical assignment that could eventually determine its future. Consistent with
past track record, this privileged vice chairman messes up with this one as
well. At least now you would expect the company to take corrective measures.
But defying all logic and common sense, the company almost nominates him for
the CEO position. To be continued….
If you replace company with the
Congress party in above paragraph, the individual in context is certainly Rahul
Gandhi. Without any grassroots experience, Rahul Gandhi got a Lok Sabha ticket
from Congress in 2004 only because of his surname. Without any concrete
contribution to either the UPA government or the Congress party he directly
became party’s General Secretary in 2007. He was also given additional charge
of Indian Youth Congress and student wing of NSUI. Till today his plans remain
unfulfilled, and the entire process of organizing internal elections has fallen
way short of building a formidable cadre or giving space to good leadership. For
the pan India revival of Congress, it was necessary to regain lost ground in
crucial Hindi heartland of UP and Bihar. So Rahul Gandhi was given full charge
of assembly elections in these two states. After his hectic campaigning,
Congress won just 4 out of 243 seats in Bihar. In UP state elections, he was in
complete control of everything from campaigning to ticket allocation. He alone
addressed more than 200 rallies. Result – Congress won just 28 out 403 seats, not
even 10% of the total. Rather than holding him accountable this pathetic
performance, they ironically made him the Vice President of Congress! In few
months, the party faced crucial elections in four major states – Delhi,
Rajasthan, MP and Chhattisgarh. He was again given absolute authority to
oversee the entire campaign. Result – Congress miserably lost in all four
states. So what does Congress decide to do? They deliberated on making him the
PM candidate, and finally asked him to lead the Congress campaign for general
elections.
Message from the electorate is
loud and clear. But sometimes political parties just don’t get it. Or in a mad
scramble of sycophancy, they deliberately chose to ignore it. The message is
that people are tired of UPA's misgovernance that has led to massive
corruption, rising unemployment, and unchecked inflation. They are fed up of a
Prime Minister who has only behaved like a stooge for the dynasty without
showing any spine for courageous leadership. But instead of reading the writing
on wall, the Congress party seems to be hell bent on imposing Rahul Gandhi on
1.2 billion people. His image is now being recast as an anti-corruption
crusader, a rank outsider, a political reformer. Recently he has become more
articulate on major issues, and has acquired an uncharacteristic aggression in
an attempt to portray himself as India's angry young man. But his track record
puts a big question mark on his ability to walk the talk beyond regular
gimmicks and cameos.
Decade of hibernation
As the unchallenged leader of India’s
single largest party and incontestable inheritor to India’s biggest political
legacy, Rahul had a fantastic opportunity to outline his vision for India and
get it executed through a government that was always ready to toe his line. Forget
about Prime Minister’s post, Rahul could have worked on his pet themes by at least taking up
any relevant cabinet ministry – rural development, HRD, youth affairs, etc. But
no, running a ministry takes much more than cosmetic pretentions and gimmickry.
Why would he do this if he could simply enjoy limitless power without any
responsibility? Power with accountability is certainly a poison. In past
decade, he only played ‘hit and run’ politics without taking any of the issues
to their logical conclusion. All his interventions have only been about playing
to the gallery that can grab few eyeballs, get a mention in prime time news,
and occupy front page of national newspapers - be it one night stay at Dalit
houses, one time travel by local train, once in a while pillion ride in UP, and
many more. But he was conspicuous by
absence when his government oscillated from one crisis to another – 2G scam,
Lokpal agitation, coal gate, natural disaster in Uttarakhand, escalating
tensions with Pakistan and China, spike in food prices, rupee depreciation, Delhi
gang rape and what not. His party and his government are directly responsible
for all these issues, and he has not uttered a single word on them.
The central theme of most of his
speeches revolves around empowering India’s billion people. But he and his mother did not even empower
the one who mattered the most – India’s Prime Minister. It is because of dynastic
culture of Congress that an eminent economist like Manmohan Singh will go down
as the weakest PM India ever had.
Record as Parliamentarian
Your employer will certainly throw
you out if you don’t attend office for more than 50% of working days. Your
college will certainly not promote you to next semester if you don’t attend
more than half of your lectures. But hold on, these rules are meant for
ordinary individuals like you and me. They certainly don’t apply to our crown
prince. Rahul’s attendance in Parliament has been mere 43%. Within the Parliament,
he has not raised a single issue regarding Amethi nor has he moved any private
member’s bill. An average MP has participated in 37 debates, while Rahul Gandhi
has participated in just 2. An average MP has asked 292 questions, while
Rahulji has asked not even one. So much about respecting the sanctity of
Parliament and worshipping democracy!
Outsider?
Main thrust of Rahul’s speeches
is about reforming the Congress party and government. So you often hear him
venting anger against current system and model of politics. He talks about
democratization of political process, holding internal elections within
Congress and making it more accessible to general people especially the youth.
This is a deliberate attempt to position himself as an outsider who is challenging
the status quo and to conveniently delink himself from the system which is
perceived as opaque, rigid and corrupt. But unfortunately, he cannot fight
against the system because he is himself a product of the same system that
thrives on mediocrity and nepotism. How can he have moral authority to talk
about meritocracy within Congress when he himself gets elevated repeatedly
without any internal polls? How can he talk about democracy when he openly
embarrasses his Prime Minister by calling his decision ‘non sense’ and forces
the entire Cabinet to fall in line?
Will, not Bill
Rahul has a formidable answer to
every major challenge that India is facing today – pass a bill in Parliament.
Even after ten years of political experience, he thinks that only making laws
is panacea to everything. So if GDP is slowing down and resulting in large
scale unemployment, pass a Rural Employment Guarantee Act and everything is
solved. If the entire country is troubled by rising food prices, don’t address
structural issues in agriculture but pass a Food Security Bill and no child in
India will stay hungry! If mere passage of bills could resolve everything, then
India would not have witnessed such widespread corruption even after RTI was
passed way back in 2005. What we need more than anything else is effective
governance and political will to govern.
Rahul Gandhi’s behavior is
analogous to a child who does not study
for the entire year and
wakes up only a week before the exam. This guy was sleeping for
all these years and suddenly few months before the general elections he realizes that much needs to be done. And
that’s why you see this sudden ferocity, activity and aggression with
projecting his image. If he had worked for past 5 years, he would not have needed a media overdrive in last 5
months. But unfortunately, all attempts will fall short of washing away his
sins of commission and omission in UPA-2.
A humiliating defeat in next
general elections is what he certainly deserves.