https://scroll.in/article/860719/foot-in-mouth-mani-shankar-aiyar-has-been-suspended-from-the-congress-but-is-it-too-late

Foot-in-mouth Mani Shankar Aiyar has been suspended from the Congress – but
is it too late?

The Congress leader has been a serial offender and this is not the first
time he proved embarrassing for his party.

by  Anita Katyal
Published 5 hours ago

Foot-in-mouth Mani Shankar Aiyar has been suspended from the Congress – but
is it too late?
PTI

The irrepressible Mani Shankar Aiyar, Congress party’s former nominated
member of Parliament in Rajya Sabha, hit the headlines once again. And, as
always, it is for all the wrong reasons. In fact, this has become a habit
with the career diplomat-turned-politician, whose name has become
synonymous with controversies. Undoubtedly, Aiyar has a way with words but
his remarks and statements invariably end up landing him in trouble and
embarrassing the Congress. Once he gets going, there is just no stopping
him.

In the run-up to the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, he queered the pitch for the
Congress when he referred to the Bhartiya Janata Party’s prime ministerial
candidate Narendra Modi as a “chaiwalla”. On Thursday, he was once again in
the eye of a storm when he described Prime Minister Narendra Modi as a
“neech aadmi”, for which he was suspended from the primary membership of
the Congress party.

On both occasions, the BJP seized the opportunity and lost no time in
dubbing the Congress as an elitist party, which has disdain for those who
come from poor families and belong to lower castes. In both instances, Modi
was gifted an opportunity to remind the electorate about his background and
how a chaiwalla like him had risen to the country’s top post.

The suspension came after Congress President-elect Rahul Gandhi tweeted his
disapproval of the comment made by Aiyar.

BJP and PM routinely use filthy language to attack the Congress party. The
Congress has a different culture and heritage. I do not appreciate the tone
and language used by Mr Mani Shankar Aiyer to address the PM. Both the
Congress and I expect him to apologise for what he said.

— Office of RG (@OfficeOfRG) December 7, 2017
In response, Aiyar blamed the remark on Hindi not being his mother tongue.
“I meant low level when I said ‘neech’, I think in English when I speak in
Hindi as Hindi is not my mother tongue,” Aiyer said. “So if it has some
other meaning then I apologise.”

Foot-in-mouth disease

“The problem with Mani is that he has a foot-in-mouth disease. He just does
not know where to draw the line,” said a former Congress minister

Actually, Aiyar has a lot going for him. The former minister is from the
prestigious Doon School and St Stephen’s College after which he got a
degree from Cambridge University. Though hard to believe (given his habit
of indulging in undiplomatic talk), he joined the Indian Foreign Service
and actually made a success of his career as a diplomat. He left the
service to join the Congress following a spell in the Prime Minister’s
Office when Rajiv Gandhi was in power in the mid-1980s. There is no
doubting his sharp intellect, oratorical skills and grasp of subjects as
varied as international relations to local governance. He was a no-nonsense
minister – he handled the petroleum, sports and panchayati raj ministries
in the Manmohan Singh-led United Progressive Alliance government – who was
not easily taken in by the bureaucracy.

And yet he is best remembered for his loose talk and his insistence on
taking a contrarian position, which cost him his place in the Cabinet.
Arrogant and pompous, he has been known to put down anyone who he believed
was intellectually inferior. Though he has been a favourite on television
channels for the past several years now, he is known for his disdain for
the media. “Journalists are basically people who knew they couldn’t pass
the Civil Services exam,” he often remarked. Humility is not a trait
associated with Aiyar. When he and Jairam Ramesh wrote Sonia Gandhi’s
speeches, he once famously remarked to Ramesh about a particular speech.
“It could only have been written by you, me or us.”

Targeting his own party

Though the BJP was usually the target of his attacks, he was not above
mocking his own party colleagues as well. He once publicly ridiculed former
Congress minister Ajay Maken’s English language skills and the fact that he
was not a student of St Stephen’s College. He attacked his own government
at a Cabinet meeting as a sports minister for hosting the Commonwealth
games. Aiyar even threatened to sit on dharna at Rajghat to protest against
the games. Passionate about promoting panchayati raj, he differed with
Manmohan Singh’s brand of economics and did not hesitate to say so. He took
on P Chidambaram when he declared that he “one lakh per cent” agreed with
Digvijaya Singh’s criticism of the former home minister’s handling of Left
wing extremism. His position on Pakistan also differed from that of his
party.

Aiyar has been equally irreverent about Congress president Sonia Gandhi.
When he was not offered any position in the Congress party, his constant
refrain was: There are two criteria for being drafted as a member of the
Congress Working Committee. You should not possess a degree and should have
undergone a bypass surgery. “Unfortunately, neither apply to me,” he would
say. Aiyar’s own favourite story, which he recounted several times was
about when he attacked Sonia Gandhi at a social gathering much to the
embarrassment of the other guests. He would have continued but was cut
short by a familiar voice from the next room, “Mani…I am here.” A report in
a Hindi newspaper summed it up aptly with the headline, ”Mani hai ki manta
hi nahin.”

In fact, there is a fund of Mani tales which have been doing the rounds
over the years. One well-known story is about former minister and once a
Gandhi family loyalist K Natwar Singh who wrote in the St Stephen’s
visitor’s book; “I am what I am because of the college.” The quick-witted
Aiyar noted below: ”Why blame the college?” When a IFS colleague, who was
his neighbour, got a tall boundary wall constructed between their houses,
Aiyar famously remarked, “He thinks he is protecting himself against me but
he does not realise I can always stab him in the back.”

Despite his penchant for embarrassing the Congress party, he managed to get
away with it because Sonia Gandhi was always indulgent towards him. He was
accommodated in the Manmohan Singh-led government and later nominated to
the Rajya Sabha. But he appears to have crossed the line this time and paid
the price for it.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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