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Rahul Gandhi may soon take over from mother

India: The heir to India’s most successful political dynasty launched a campaign for key state polls on Monday, increasing speculation he may soon take over from his ailing mother as leader of the ruling Congress party.

Rahul Gandhi, 41, needs to rally voters in polls due by May next year in the state of Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous and one of the poorest, to strengthen his case to lead at the national level.

A key plank of Gandhi’s outreach efforts is to convince the poor, once a loyal support base for the Congress, but now increasingly fragmented into supporting regional parties seen as amplifying their specific concerns.

“The anguish and helplessness of the poor angers me,” Gandhi said at a large rally in Phulpur, once the constituency of his great grandfather Jawaharlal Nehru, India’s first prime minister following independence from the British in 1947.

“I have learnt that a leader will never understand the plight of poor unless he eats at a poor man’s house or drinks dirty water from a well in a village and upsets his stomach,” he said at the rally on the anniversary of Nehru’s birth.

In Uttar Pradesh, Gandhi needs to best Chief Minister Mayawati, whose Bhujan Samaj Party (BSP) who has wide support in the state that sends the most seats to the national parliament and is a grooming ground for future prime ministers. He has a tough job on his hands. The national government coalition led by the Congress has floundered in its second term, with high inflation and anger at corruption scandals paralyzing economic reforms and souring support.

Gandhi has spent the last few years travelling across the country to take up the cause of poor farmers, and spent nights in impoverished village homes to gain a deeper understanding of the country’s social ills.

But as an elected member of parliament since 2004 from Uttar Pradesh, he rarely speaks on national issues and has spent much of his time of organising the party’s youth wing.

His few forays into national politics have mostly fallen flat — most recently an attempt to mediate during massive anti-corruption protests flopped and he looked indecisive. Phulpur, Tuesday, Reuters

 

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