Sunday, March 23rd, 2025

Opinion: Will Raga sing the right raga now, what is the indication of speech on Monday in Parliament?

Raga (Rahul Gandhi) Will we sing the right raga now? Will Rahul’s tune now sit right now? Rahul Gandhi’s speech in Parliament on Monday was a glimpse of the capacity of the 54 -year -old leader. he/she criticized the governments failure to deal with unemployment in a dramatic but balanced manner, failure of Make in India, failure to increase production capacity in the country and criticized ‘handing over it to Chinese’ and other things. his/her speech was the same as expected from the Leader of the Opposition. But, it was just a speech. Inside the Parliament, which is more visible, is a constant combination. At the inauguration of the new Congress headquarters’ Indira Bhavan ‘, Rahul Gandhi gave a rebellious message to the senior leaders of the party,’ Don’t think that we fight a fair fight Are … We are now fighting BJP, RSS and Indian state. The irony is that the political legacy that these heirs of the Gandhi family were taking forward were not of Indira Gandhi, but of his/her staunch opponent Jayaprakash Narayan. Anti -organization politics, a ‘corrupt’ and ‘occupied’ wrapped in ‘revolutionary’ symbols claims to challenge the prevailing system.

BJP definitely had a good opportunity to bounce its favorite topics ‘Urban Naxal Link’ and ‘George Soros Playbook’, so that the Congress leader has a sabotage agent on ‘breaking India and dividing our society’ Can be painted as.

2025 is a moment like 1975 for Rahul Gandhi. The constitution is threatened by excessive centralization of power. Common people, especially youth, are troubled by high unemployment and ever increasing inflation. And the lower castes, especially Dalits, are separating from the strong grip of the ruling coalition. Is there any power in this argument?

Yes, it definitely has a glimpse of history. So in the last one year, in Haryana and Maharashtra and as seen during campaigning, apparently in Delhi, why did this rebel message not be liked by voters? Say this in another way, why does Rahul Gandhi look weak versions of Jayaprakash Narayan? Forget the difference of personality. Above all, there is a very direct reason.

Unlike the era of 1974-75 of JP’s ‘Sampoorna Revolution’, no party has confidence in Rahul Gandhi’s face. In fact, the situation is completely opposite. TMC, SP and UBT Army, the leading opposition party of India coalition, are all supporting the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) in Delhi, not Rahul Gandhi’s Congress.

Even RJD’s Tejashwi Yadav has constantly questioned the existence of the alliance. Not only this, the Congress has been given the role of junior partner in the upcoming Bihar assembly elections. As soon as Rahul Gandhi gave the green signal to the ‘Jai Bapu, Jai Bhima, Jai Constitution’ rally of Congress in Mhow earlier this month, there was not a single ally in solidarity on the stage.

The strength of JP’s message lies in his/her ability to advance the voice of the entire opposition. Meanwhile, Rahul Gandhi has his/her Congress party
he/she is unable to speak reliably as the voice of his/her own party. Even when he/she promises caste census in Delhi, his/her party’s Karnataka government regularly delays the release of the caste survey report of the state.

For almost a year, CM Siddaramaiah has been evasive and interrupted for fear of opposition from the influential castes of the state. Or consider how the Congress government of Telangana made a deal of ₹ 12,400 crore with the Adani Group in Davos last year, while Rahul Gandhi continued to attack Adani in every political meeting. Or take a case of Himachal Pradesh, where the entire executive control is centralized and where the entire Congress state unit has been dissolved for the last three months.

Rahul Gandhi does not even need to be JP. The source of the charisma of the elderly JP was a devotional feelings like a saint among his/her young followers that he/she inspired. Nobody expected a road map for the future from them. On the other hand, the source of Rahul Gandhi’s charisma, as far as we saw during the journey of India, comes from his/her youth passion and his/her vague avatar of an alternative future.

German sociologist Max Weber used the word Karisma for those who want to change some aspects of the society, and they have an approach to how to do it. The trouble is that vision is blurred many times in the rage of Gandhi’s opposition to the status quo.

In a nationwide survey last year, 71% of the respondents agreed that unemployment is a serious issue. For the growing young population, which throngs thousands of people in thousands, this is a continuous crisis. Opposition parties have so far failed to organize this restless youth population because it is a scattered and unorganized class of the population, unlike farmers.

A politician like Rahul Gandhi can still exploit the frustrated energy of this major demographics, provided he/she continued and loudly, leaks of examination papers, pathetic conditions of many schools and colleges and weak growth of small and medium enterprise sector Pick up Many times, they have raised these issues, but in a reactionary or indifferent manner, not with continuity to the scale of crisis.

For example, last year, Rahul Gandhi’s brief social media series of going to the bike garage and chocolate factories, his/her airy journey through ‘Kamakaji Bharat’ should be a regular program. Similarly, there should be a press conference on irregularities in examinations/jobs.

Rahul Gandhi has improved his/her eloquence, flexibility and political skills in the last decade. he/she is no longer novice for UPA years. Also, he/she still appears as a leader who is less than the sum of his/her abilities, always a little different from the political moment.

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