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Rahul Gandhi's coronation as the Congress president next month is taking place at the right time for him and the party.
Over the last two months, he has undergone a remarkable metamorphosis. It is difficult to say why this change has taken place, but there is little doubt about its reality.
From someone who tried to cover up his inadequacies in the fields of ideas and oratory by his shrillness in Parliament and outside, Rahul Gandhi has suddenly become calm and composed — a person who can articulate his views cogently and is not afraid to mock himself by saying that he has been called "stupid" by a section of citizens ostensibly associated with the saffron camp.
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Little wonder, therefore, that his election rallies in Himachal Pradesh and especially in Gujarat have drawn more enthusiastic crowds than during his earlier campaigns in Bihar and Uttar Pradesh.
It is possible that the refined genes of the Nehru-Gandhi family are coming to the fore. It is for this reason that senior leaders like Sharad Pawar are no longer averse to dealing directly with him instead of preferring Sonia Gandhi.
It is not surprising, therefore, that the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is no longer taking him lightly, as can be seen from the harshness of Narendra Modi's attacks on the Congress – or "termites", as he has called it – and his charge about the intense dislike of Gujarat which the Congress and the dynasty apparently harbour against the state.
Or for the BJP to raise the inevitable suspicion that it persuaded the Election Commission to delay for a few weeks the announcement of the poll dates in Gujarat so that some more sops for the electorate could be rolled out by the state government before the model code of conduct came into force.
The BJP's nervousness about the unexpected challenge posed by someone whom it routinely derided as ‘Pappu’ or an adolescent might have been exacerbated by the sudden praise heaped on Rahul Gandhi by a spokesman of the BJP's ally, the Shiv Sena, who even said that the Congress vice-president was capable of becoming the Prime Minister — a possibility to which neither Rahul Gandhi's friends or foes had alluded to before.
One reason why it is no longer going about in a daze is its marginal recovery from the 2014 drubbing because of the party's successes in the Punjab assembly elections and in the by-election in Chitrakoot in Madhya Pradesh, where it increased its vote share.
Besides, the party occupied the No 1 position in the Goa and Manipur assemblies before the BJP lured away some of the its legislators.
The Congress is also exuding greater confidence because of the belief that it is on the verge of a generational shift which cannot but breathe new life into the party as its old guard retreats into the background and a younger lot – Sachin Pilot in Rajasthan, Jyotiraditya Scindia in Madhya Pradesh – takes charge.
It is not that all those who are 70-plus will be put out to pasture, as the BJP has done with its "margdarshak mandali" or visionary group comprising LK Advani, Murli Manohar Joshi and others.
In the Congress, Chief Ministers like Amarinder Singh and Siddaramaiah will continue to play important roles. But Rahul Gandhi's supremacy will not be in doubt just as Sonia Gandhi's isn't.
To many, the preponderance of the dynasty may be the fly in the ointment. No doubt the Congress's opponents will press this point with increasing vehemence as the party shows signs of recovery via the successes of its student wing, the National Students Union of India, and its allies in the students' union elections as in Delhi university, Allahabad University and Kashi Vidyapith.
In the last two institutions, the Samajwadi Party's students' wing won over the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP), the BJP's student wing.
But the fact that the Congress is no longer a pushover is evident if only because it is gaining from the BJP's missteps on the economy and its failure to control the militants in its ranks as can be seen from the threats that are being made against the director and actors of the film, "Padmavati", because it does not confirm to the saffron version of medieval Indian history.
(Amulya Ganguli is a political analyst. He can be reached at amulyaganguli@gmail.com. This is an opinion piece and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.)
(This article has been published in an arrangement with IANS.)
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Published: 25 Nov 2017,04:35 PM IST