Explorer

Rahul is now my boss too, let there be no doubt about that: Sonia Gandhi

"The minorities feel unsafe and are being subjected to barbarous attacks. Dalits have come under renewed and widespread atrocities,as have women," she also said.

New Delhi: Sonia Gandhi in a Congress Parliamentary Party meeting said Rahul Gandhi is her boss and there shouldn’t be any doubt about it. Rahul Gandhi took over the Congress President’s role from mother Sonia in December last year. Sonia, however, remains the chairperson of the Congress Parliamentary party. “We have a new Congress president and on your behalf and my own I wish him (Rahul Gandhi) all the best. He is now my boss too. Let there be no doubt about that,” she said. She hoped all the Parliamentarians will work with him with the same dedication, loyalty and enthusiasm as they did with her. Sonia said the party had performed very creditably under tough circumstances in Gujarat and the recent by-election results in Rajasthan were huge. “This  shows that the winds of change are coming.” “I am sure that very soon the election results in Karnataka too will underline the resurgence of the Congress,” she exuded confidence. Sonia asserted that the MPs must not only highlight the abject failures of the Modi government but more importantly, build a positive and credible narrative for ourselves on issues of public concern. Read the complete speech below: It has been quite a long while since we met as a group and for this I seek your indulgence. In the meantime, we have elected a new Congress President and on your behalf and on my own, I wish him all the very best. He is now my boss too—let there be no doubt about that – and I know that all of you will work with him with the same dedication, loyalty and enthusiasm as you did with me.  I am confident that we will work cohesively under his leadership to revive our Party’s fortunes.  That process has begun.  We performed very creditably under tough circumstances in Gujarat and the recent by-election results in Rajasthan were huge.  This  shows that the winds of change are coming.  I take this opportunity to warmly congratulate the leaders and the thousands of workers who brought us these results in both the States.  I am sure that very soon the election results in Karnataka too will underline the resurgence of the Congress. It has been almost four years since this government came to power. This has been a period in which institutions that are at the foundation of our democracy have come under systematic assault—Parliament itself,  the judiciary, media and civil society. Investigative agencies have been let loose against political opponents.  An all-pervasive atmosphere of fear and intimidation has been created.   Liberal, secular and democratic traditions are being wantonly damaged. The pluralistic nature of our society—which has been its strength for centuries—is being eroded. Tall claims are being made of so-called economic achievements, but the reality is quite different.  Agriculture continues to be in deep distress and the desperation of farmers is sadly evident in the number of suicides. The rural economy and small and medium enterprises,are in shambles. Unemployment is staring at our youth. New jobs are not only not being created, but existing jobs themselves are being lost. Employment cannot happen without new investments and the fact is that there has been a marked decline in the rate of investment over the past four years.  The last budget is full of sleights of hand – of jumlas -- such as the oft-repeated but impossible to achieve promise to double farmer incomes in five years, and the promises of increased support prices without clarifying their  basis. The disinvestment figures have been exaggerated by including the sale of equity in one public sector company to another, a revised health insurance scheme has been passed off as new and proposed without adequate preparation or worse, budgetary support. This government announces what it calls new programmes and initiatives  ever so often, unveiling them with the flourish of a magician.  In reality, they are simply recycled schemes that were launched during the UPA government. True, the new names are catchy and colourful, perhaps much more so than during our time, we must admit.  But this seems to be a game of Maximum Publicity, Minimum Government, or put another way, Maximum Marketing, Minimum Delivery.   If this government is to be believed, India  had accomplished nothing before May 2014.   The arrogance and  dishonesty of thistells us that the Modi government is out of touch with reality, and  lives by its own propaganda and lies.  We need no further evidence of this than the Prime Minister’s speech in the Lok  Sabha yesterday morning. As we look around us, we see a deeply troubled country and deeply troubled people.  Jammu and Kashmir continues to bleed.  We share the anguish of our brothers and sisters in that state. We must combat cross-border terrorism forcefully—on that there can be no compromise.  We salute our jawans who are bearing the brunt.  Our  hearts go out to the families of those who have laid down their lives for our country.   Side-by-side, we must  also ask, where is the healing touch, where is the developmental thrust, where    is the political engagement that was so much in evidence when Dr Manmohan Singh was Prime Minister? In Nagaland, an accord was announced with great fanfare more than two years ago.  We are still awaiting its details. The minorities feel unsafe and are being subjected to barbarous attacks.  Dalits have come under renewed and widespread atrocities,as have women. In many cases this violence, specially against minorities and dalits is not sporadic or random, but orchestrated to polarize our society for narrow political gains. We saw this in both UP and Gujarat.  We will no doubt see it again in Karnataka. Such polarization is criminal in a democracy, yet those in power look the other way. And what do we make of the government resorting to fictitious arguments to justify the secrecy about  the price of one of India’s biggest defence purchases -  the Rafael fighter aircraft ?   Or its refusal to respond to wholly justified demands to satisfactorily investigate certain sensitive legal cases of  far reaching political consequence. If someone can say what foreign policy this government believes it is pursuing, we would all be enlightened.Relations with some of our most important neighbours have never been as bad as they are now.  Personalized diplomacy and public bear-hugsare all very well but there is no substitute for institutionalized processes, for hard work and preparation, and for continuity in our national policies. Friends, we have to be in a state of readiness for the national elections which are due in slightly over a year – and might well be called earlier as they were in 2004.  No doubt 2014 was a severe setback, but I am convinced that it was an aberration. Increasingly, the people of our country,  people belonging to all sections of our society—are getting disillusioned with the present regime. It is for us to channel this discontent into support.  We have demonstrated our resilience before and we are now called upon to do so again. For this we must not only highlight the abject failures of the Modi government but more importantly, build a positive and credible narrative for ourselves on issues of public concern. As for myself, as Chairperson of the Congress Parliamentary Party, I will work with the Congress President and other colleagues in discussions with like-minded, political parties to ensure that in the next election, the BJP is defeated and India is restored to a democratic, inclusive, secular, tolerant and economically progressive path.
View More
Advertisement
Advertisement
25°C
New Delhi
Rain: 100mm
Humidity: 97%
Wind: WNW 47km/h
See Today's Weather
powered by
Accu Weather
Advertisement

Top Headlines

BJP MP Mukesh Rajput Admitted To ICU As Parliament Protest On Ambedkar Turns Chaotic
BJP MP Mukesh Rajput Admitted To ICU As Parliament Protest On Ambedkar Turns Chaotic
Rahul Gandhi Reacts To BJP MP's Claim Of Injuring Him, Says He was 'Threatened' On Parliament Campus
RaGa Reacts To BJP MP Pratap Sarangi's Claim Of Injuring Him, Says He was 'Threatened'
After 'Zero' Electricity Bill For 6 Months, Sambhal MP Zia ur Rahman Booked For Power Theft
After 'Zero' Electricity Bill For 6 Months, Sambhal MP Zia ur Rahman Booked For Power Theft
Congress, Leaders Get X Notice For Sharing Amit Shah's 'Fashion' Remark Video
Congress, Leaders Get X Notice For Sharing Amit Shah's 'Fashion' Remark Video
Advertisement
ABP Premium

Videos

Lucknow Protest Turns Tragic: Congress Worker Dies, Police Investigation UnderwaySambhal News: SP MP Ziaur Rahman Barq Faces Fresh FIR for Threatening Electricity Officials Amid Meter Tampering ProbeUttar Pradesh Police Questions Congress Chief Ajay Rai in Worker’s Death CaseSambhal News: Electricity Department Probes Suspicious Meter Reading at SP MP Ziaur Rahman Barq’s Home

Photo Gallery

Embed widget