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HomeOpinionModi still attacks Congress when he goes abroad. Rahul Gandhi is now...

Modi still attacks Congress when he goes abroad. Rahul Gandhi is now following his lead

Rahul Gandhi has been tearing into the Modi government throughout his interactions in the US this week. Not just the BJP, he's gone for the RSS too.

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Put yourself in this situation. You are a top Indian politician. You have fought for two terms against a government that you regard as immoral and a disgrace to the nation, and you are not embarrassed to say this openly. And in all your speeches, you make sure that your opponents get it in their necks.

Then, you go abroad. You address gatherings of people who know something about India. They are familiar with your record. They know what you have been saying back home. So, they ask you questions about your political rivals and what they have done to India.

How do you reply? What do you say in your speeches and interactions? Do you suddenly abandon all the positions you took when you were on Indian soil? Do you change your tone? Do you sing a different song, entirely? Do you say “I am sorry but I am in a foreign country so I won’t talk about Indian politics”? You could, I guess, say all these things. Or you could simply be honest.

I remind you of all this because, shortly after Narendra Modi became Prime Minister in 2014, he went abroad and spoke about Indian politics on foreign soil. Of course, he had the option of keeping his mouth shut. Or saying ‘no comment,’ or even, “I don’t want to say anything about my political opponents because that would amount to attacking Indians in a foreign country.”

As you may remember, Modi did none of these things. He went for the jugular of his Congress rivals.

Self-congratulation, attacking opposition

In 2015, Prime Minister Modi declared in Germany that he would clean up the “mess left behind” by his Congress opponents. In Canada, he said that India’s image was one of ‘scams’.  But he would change it so that India was regarded as a ‘skilled nation.’

Not content with badmouthing his political opponents in Europe and North America, the PM took his show on the road to the Middle East. In Oman, Modi said that India’s image had suffered due to a long list of scams during the Congress government and he was working hard to change the ‘style of misgovernance’.

Like some rock star who performs his greatest hits around the world, the Prime Minister has managed to sing the same songs, attacking his predecessors and political rivals, wherever he goes. In Seoul, he said there was a time when “people used to wonder what sin had they committed in their past lives which resulted in their taking birth in India.”

In Shanghai, Modi told the Indian community, “Earlier you were ashamed of India but today” (i.e. once he became Prime Minister) “you are feeling proud of the country.” In Canada, he said of Manmohan Singh’s government “Jisko gandagi karani thi, gandagi karke chale gaye.” (Those who had created filth have done so and left). That Congress government’s mission, he said, was ‘Scam India’.

All these attacks on his political rivals were accompanied by a certain amount of self-congratulation. In his first appearance at New York’s Madison Square Garden in 2014, right after he had been elected, Modi told NRIs, “You may not have voted in 2014 but when the results were coming in, you celebrated.”

He is still at it. Speaking in Copenhagen this year, he said that his launch of Digital India had transformed India, which had earlier been one of the most backward nations in this respect. And though he had faced criticism and scepticism from his opponents, he had pulled this off.

And on and on the speeches go. They are packed with his greatest hits and the same jabs at his political opponents. Modi may now be the only man in Indian history to have attacked his political rivals in over 50 different countries. (Or more: he has made 79 trips as Prime Minister and visited 70 countries.)

Has Modi done something wrong? Should he have refrained from fighting political battles on foreign soil? Is the office of the Prime Minister of India such that, when he travels, he must leave domestic political battles behind?

Well maybe. Or maybe not. What’s clear though is that Modi does not believe that he has done anything wrong. He has headlined nearly as many venues as Taylor Swift. And like her, Modi has played the same tunes again and again to cheering crowds.

Frankly, I am coming around to the view that he is probably right to say the things he says. Why should we expect the Prime Minister of India to turn into a different person the moment he leaves India? If these are his views — and in the age of the internet, these views are no secret, all around the world — why should he run shy of expressing them?

Many in the audience that turn out to hear him, especially during his Indian community receptions, are fans who want to hear him rip into the Congress. Why would he deny them that pleasure after a decade in office?

After all, even now, when their idols are in their 80s, people still go to see the Rolling Stones and expect them to play (I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction, which, I guess, reflects the sentiments the Prime Minister is offering his fans. It’s become an old song now, but it gets the crowd going.

All of which leads us, inexorably, to Rahul Gandhi. The BJP’s position is that Gandhi is not worthy of having his name mentioned in the same breath as Narendra Modi. But there is no denying that, in this respect at least, Gandhi is following in Modi’s footsteps.

Throughout his interactions in the US this week, he has been tearing into the Modi government. Unlike the Prime Minister, he is not using terms like creators of ‘gandagi’ or promoters of ‘scams’ to describe what is going on in India. He is not pulling his punches either. He has gone for the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), saying that it seeks to divide communities and that, according to its thinking, “certain religions are inferior to other religions”. 

Some of his statements have been direct attacks on the BJP government, “It tried to create an environment of fear. Various agencies, media, and income tax department tried to spread fear.” And some have been personal jibes at the Prime Minister, “I can tell you that the idea of Prime Minister Modi’s 56-inch chest, direct communication with God. That’s all gone.”


Also read: ‘I don’t hate PM Modi, but disagree with his point of view’: Rahul Gandhi in US


Parroting Congress

When Narendra Modi attacked the Congress in his speeches abroad, Congress leaders reacted with anger. Anand Sharma said, “This is his characteristic style, the Prime Minister continues to insult history and India’s achievements since Independence”.

The BJP’s leaders and spokespeople are now saying more or less exactly what Sharma and others had said. Just as Gandhi is following Modi’s lead, BJP spokespersons are parroting what Congress leaders have said. Only this time, the roles are reversed.

Rahul Gandhi’s remarks on the RSS’ attempts to divide communities, and how Sikhs in India were under threat when it came to retaining their religious identity, have also faced sustained attack from the BJP. “Who is he to talk about Sikhs,” they say, “when the Congress participated in an anti-Sikh pogrom 40 years ago?”

None of this seems likely to shut Rahul Gandhi up just as none of the Congress criticisms have made any difference to the tone of the Prime Minister’s remarks for more than a decade.

But at least one rule now seems firmly established: No matter where in the world they are speaking, India’s political leaders will say the same sort of things about each other as they do in India.

Is this such a bad thing? I don’t know. Certainly, neither Rahul nor Modi think it’s so bad.

Vir Sanghvi is a print and television journalist, and talk show host. He tweets @virsanghvi. Views are personal.

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4 COMMENTS

  1. RG spoke without facts.

    No discrimination against Sikhs in India. Sikhs spoiled their own name. Punjab is a state which has been ruled by Sikhs. Their own people and Congress party have let them down.

    RG is a joker. If not a dynasty, for his communication skills, low or no commitment to people welfare or his GK or political skills, he will not be here at this stage.
    He is like a parrot, replying what his masters have trained him to say.
    He was caught off-gaurd on the expansion of A in INDIA. That was not in the script.

    Modi was right highlighting the UPA 2 as scam days.
    Rahul is not right about RSS or BJP. There are no facts.
    Vir Singhvi Saab, itna mat support Karo RG kho.

  2. Whatever Vir holds in his mouth must be really tasty…..he keeps sucking on them for years refusing to let them go….admirable qualities indeed

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