http://scroll.in/article/725637/whos-afraid-of-narendra-modi-sonia-gandhi-launches-barrage-against-prime-minister

STRIKING OUT
Who's afraid of Narendra Modi? Sonia Gandhi launches barrage against
prime minister
Anita Katyal  · Today · 09:15 am

Who's afraid of Narendra Modi? Sonia Gandhi launches barrage against
prime minister
Photo Credit: Raveendran/AFP

The Congress president's speeches in Parliament and outside show the
party is no longer shy of targetting Modi.

Coming a long way from a time when her party dithered over even naming
Narendra Modi in the party's election campaigns, especially in
Gujarat, Congress president Sonia Gandhi launched a stinging personal
attack against the prime minister both inside Parliament and outside.

Following up on her son and Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi's
charge that Prime Minister Narendra Modi had amended the land
acquisition bill to favour his friends in the corporate sector, Sonia
Gandhi on Wednesday took the battle further into the enemy camp.

The Congress president hit out at the prime minister and his
government first in her customary address to party MPs and then
followed it up with a rare intervention in Parliament. In Lok Sabha,
she castigated the ruling alliance for its "deplorable lapse" in
delaying the appointment of the central information commissioner and
chief vigilance commissioner, as a result of which, she said, the
Prime Minister's Office had seized control of the Chief Information
Commission and undermined its autonomy.

In both instances, the Congress president peppered her speeches with
references to the prime minister or the Modi government as against the
National Democratic Alliance government, in a clear signal that the
Congress has shed its initial inhibitions and is now ready to battle
Modi.

Mirage of acche din

Taking advantage of the change in public perception about Narendra
Modi and his government, Sonia Gandhi criticised the prime minister
for failing to keep his election promise of bringing greater
transparency in governance and accused him of running a highly
centralised government besides promoting himself at the expense of the
state.

"The PM in the election campaign made many fraudulent promises about
transparency - and continues to do so," she said. "In a blatant
U-turn, his government, through the absence of a Chief Information
Commissioner, has made sure that the highest offices are not
accountable under the RTI Act." This has stripped citizens of the
right to question the government, she added.

The Congress president went a step further in her address to party
MPs, charging that Modi had failed to deliver on all fronts, that his
promise of "acche din" was only a mirage, and that the prime minister
merely announces grandiose schemes to grab headlines.

Accusing the Modi government of neglecting farmers and diluting the
rights of handloom weavers, tribals and workers, Sonia Gandhi pointed
out that the ruling alliance had reduced the outlays for welfare
programmes benefiting the poor but announced a generous bonanza for
the corporate sector. "Behind the smokescreen of development, the
government is providing achche din only for crony capitalists," she
said.

Bureaucrats disempowered

Her remarks served to underline the Congress party's conscious effort
to position itself as a champion of the weaker sections while painting
the Modi government as being pro-industry.

Besides slamming the Modi government for its policies, the Congress
president hit out at the prime minister's style of functioning,
stating that he was responsible for creating the most centralised
government in India's recent history.

"Ministers hardly matter," she said. "Even the bureaucrats, who are
supposedly empowered, feel paralysed because all key files are pending
in the PMO for decision. The Prime Minister likes to talk of
consensus. Yet ignoring convention, this government acts with
obstinate arrogance." She took a further swipe at the prime minister,
saying that such "centralisation of power" is not new for Modi and
pointed to the passage of the controversial anti-terror law by the
Gujarat government which gives draconian powers to the police. She
wondered if this is what was sought to be replicated at the Centre.
"We can give this government credit for strengthening one man's power
while weakening the strength of the state."

The Congress president was particularly harsh in her criticism of Modi
for "playing domestic politics on foreign soil" by attacking the
United Progressive Alliance government and his predecessor on a visit
to France.

Continuing in the same vein, she said: "In Canada he sank to a new low
by referring to the UPA in despicable terms. This outrageous remark on
foreign soil belittles the dignity of the office he holds and is an
embarrassment to the nation. Such petty behaviour does not define us."

Tide is turning

Sonia Gandhi's combative speeches targeting the prime minister are a
far cry from her election campaigns, particularly in Gujarat, where
the party took a conscious decision to avoid naming Modi. The brunt of
the Congress attack was against the Gujarat government's performance
and its failure to deliver. It was felt then by the Grand Old Party
that any reference to Modi would polarise the polity and consolidate
the Hindu vote in favour of the Bharatiya Janata Party. The Congress
had learnt a bitter lesson when Sonia Gandhi's description of Modi as
"maut ka saudagar" (merchant of death) had boomeranged.

Similarly, the Congress hesitated to name Rahul Gandhi as its prime
ministerial candidate in the last Lok Sabha poll, betraying its
nervousness about turning the election into a Modi-versus-Rahul
battle. It was afraid that Rahul Gandhi may not prove much of a match
for Modi whose oratory and projection as a "strong decisive leader"
had made a favourite with the electorate.

But one year after the Modi government came to power, the Congress
believes, the tide is turning. The party's assessment is that the
sheen is wearing off the NDA government and that Modi too has become
vulnerable for failing to meet the expectations of the electorate.
Realising that people are getting disillusioned with the ruling
alliance, the Congress has decided to hit out at the government in
general and Modi in particular. The gloves are off and the stage is
set for a drawn-out confrontation.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to