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Ridiculed for a decade, Rahul Gandhi curbs Modi's advance

The Straits Times

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June 05, 2024

Indian opposition leader Rahul Gandhi, mocked by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his supporters for a decade as an entitled dynast, marked a stunning comeback on June 4, emerging at the centre of an alliance that made deep inroads into ruling party strongholds.

Ridiculed for a decade, Rahul Gandhi curbs Modi's advance

The scion of India’s fabled Nehru-Gandhi political dynasty embarked on two cross-country marches against what he called Mr Modi’s politics of hate and fear, giving a jolt of enthusiasm to his Congress party and rehabilitating his own image.

Reduced by a Modi landslide to just 52 seats in the 543-member Lower House of Parliament in 2019, Congress looks well set to nearly double that tally in 2024, according to the vote count from the general election.

That total is likely to restrict Mr Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to less than the 272 seats needed to win a majority on its own, and it will have to rely on allies to form the government.

Though it might have to sit another term out of power, Congress will have the loudest voice in a much stronger opposition, with Mr Gandhi at its centre.

As the opposition’s most prominent face, Mr Gandhi has been a target of attacks from Mr Modi and other BJP leaders, who often call him “the prince”.

Mr Gandhi’s father, grandmother and great-grandfather have all been prime ministers.

During the campaign, Mr Gandhi, with close-cropped black hair and a scruffy salt-and-pepper stubble, criss-crossed the country as his party’s main face, even though Congress is led by family loyalist Mallikarjun Kharge.

“I think Rahul Gandhi will get credit, not just for mobilisation, for his marches, but also for continuously clarifying the Congress’ ideological pitch against the BJP,” said Mr Rahul Verma, political analyst at the Centre for Policy Research think-tank in New Delhi.

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