Is Congress defending Jawaharlal Nehru as well as it protects Sonia and Rahul Gandhi?
Talk Point

Is Congress defending Jawaharlal Nehru as well as it protects Sonia and Rahul Gandhi?

The legacy of India’s first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru has been systematically dismantled over the years – through articles, memes and WhatsApp forwards.

   
Illustration by Soham Sen | ThePrint Team

Illustration by Soham Sen | ThePrint Team

The legacy of India’s first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru has been systematically dismantled over the years – through articles, memes and WhatsApp forwards. He has been demonized for his role in nation-building, Kashmir and secular pronouncements among other things. This week, Madhya Pradesh’s former CM Shivraj Singh Chouhan even called Nehru a ‘criminal’ for the ‘Kashmir blunder’.

ThePrint asks: Is Congress defending Jawaharlal Nehru as well as it protects Sonia and Rahul Gandhi?


Not just Congress, every right-thinking Indian should protect Nehru from illogical and obscene attacks

Purushottam Agrawal
Professor and author

The Congress would naturally defend Rahul Gandhi and Sonia Gandhi because the attacks on them have been deeply personal and even obscene. When it comes to Jawaharlal Nehru, maybe the party should do more than what it has done. But the question is: do we consider Nehru only as a Congress leader?

Nehru was a visionary leader who clearly articulated what has come to be known as the ‘idea of India’. The Nehruvian vision for India comprises an inclusive society in which the idea of national progress is, at least theoretically, to take everybody along, and thus upholding democratic values. Leaders like Bhagat Singh, during the freedom movement, were critical of the Congress for not being inclusive enough

On the other hand, we have had the RSS and the Muslim League criticise the Congress for being too inclusive. While the Muslim League claimed that the Congress was a party of Hindus and had no business representing Muslims, the RSS and its political arm the BJP continue to project the Congress as a party for Muslims. RSS leader M.S. Golwalkar, in his book ‘Bunch of Thoughts’, has said that Muslims, Christians, and communists, and not poverty and injustice, were India’s internal threats. Basically, the RSS sees India’s diversity, with its various ethnic groups and ideological differences, as a threat.

I believe every right-thinking Indian, and not just the Congress, should defend Nehru from such illogical and obscene attacks. It is not to say that Nehru didn’t make any mistake, but you cannot dismiss all that he did for India.


Also read: 5 criteria Rahul Gandhi’s successor must meet – even if it means burying Congress


Congress has not defended its own govt’s record, so there’s little chance it will defend Nehru

Zoya Hasan
Professor Emerita, Centre for Political Studies, JNU

Jawaharlal Nehru was the founder of modern India and instrumental in establishing India’s secular democracy. He died 55 years ago but is still under attack from various quarters, mostly from the Right-wing.

It is easy to point out his mistakes and policy errors, but difficult to emulate his overall concerns, which were part of the wider liberal, democratic nationalist project –economic development through industrialisation, strategic autonomy through non-alignment, and creation of new institutions. As Prime Minister, he understood the imperative need to accommodate different ethnicities, languages, religions and culture in a pluralistic society.

The Congress has not defended Nehru despite the fact that it owes much of its longevity and what it is today to his leadership. But this is not surprising because it has failed to defend even its own government’s record at a time when there has been a concerted attempt to rewrite India’s development history as though development started only in 2014.

Arguably, there is a discernible reluctance within the Congress in defending Nehru. The constant attacks made against the Nehru-Gandhi family could be fuelling fears that defending Nehru could reinforce the prevalent perception that the Congress is a family firm.

Equally important is the shift in the Congress’ political and economic paradigm beyond Nehru’s legacy. The party became the architect of economic liberalisation, compromised on secularism, and allowed the conflation of nationalism with Hindu nationalism. These mark a departure from the Nehru era and could be another reason for the Congress’ reluctance in defending Nehru.

The Congress is caught in a bind. If it takes a stand now, it would end up defending Nehru and not Nehruvian ideas. And defending Nehru would mean feeding into the charge of dynasty politics, even though he had little role to play in this.


Also read: Five big challenges Sonia Gandhi has to deal with as interim president of Congress


Nehru’s Congress had strong ideological positions, which Congress lacks today

Rahul Verma
Fellow at Centre for Policy Research

Most political parties defend their leadership, so the Congress doing it for the members of the Gandhi family is not a big issue. The problem with the Congress is that it has not yet identified the root cause of why it is facing an existential crisis. In fact, the party does not even seem to acknowledge the severity of the situation it is currently in. It seems that many in the Congress brush aside the outcome of the 2014 and 2019 Lok Sabha elections as just defeats when in reality they were political disasters.

Currently, the Congress is a ‘sinking ship’ but instead of finding its purpose and direction, the party’s concern seems to be limited to choosing the captain of the ship.

Jawaharlal Nehru’s Congress had clear ideological positions on most issues facing the country, which is why he is regarded as the tallest leader of the party. This is also why he has been attacked the most by the BJP whose ideological position is completely opposite to Nehru’s.

On several occasions, Congress leaders go out of their way to defend Rahul Gandhi and Sonia Gandhi – courtiers being more loyal to the king than the king himself. These leaders would serve their party well if instead of acting like a fan club to the current leadership, or for that matter even to Nehru, they focussed on defending the ideas that Nehru and other Congress stalwarts promulgated. Instead of just harping on the phrase ‘Idea of India’, Congress leaders would help their party by reflecting on the Nehruvian idea of building a modern India in a democratic framework.


Congress’ dynastic politics and loyalist culture is anti-Nehru

Hilal Ahmed
Associate professor at CSDS

The symbolic presence of Nehru in the political imagination of the contemporary Indian politics should not be compared with the Congress’ reliability on the so-called Gandhi family for its survival.

The Congress leaders claim to inherit Nehru both as a leader as well as the country’s first Prime Minister largely to commemorate their incontestable power they’ve held for decades.

Yet, the Congress is not comfortable with Nehru’s ideas, and its leaders cannot be called Nehruvian in any way.

Nehru as a practising democrat was deeply interested in institution-building. This was the reason why the Congress as an institution could survive under him. But Indira Gandhi deviated significantly from her father’s politics. She systematically destroyed the Congress as an institution by establishing a new culture of loyalty, faithfulness and devotion to the party leadership.

This ‘loyalist culture’ evolved over the years and finally paved the way for what is now popularly called ‘dynastic politics’.

The Congress of today does not have any set of ideas to call itself an organisation. Rather, it relies heavily on the heritage of its ‘loyalist culture’ — promoting individuals over the institution. This is precisely why it cannot think beyond Sonia and Rahul Gandhi for the post of party president.

Nehru does not need any protection; he still survives as a powerful idea. Unfortunately, Congress leaders do not understand this.


Congress is prepared to either swim or drown together but not get fragmented at any cost

Rasheed Kidwai
ORF Visiting Fellow and author of Sonia, a Biography and 24 Akbar Road

For the Congress, defending its leaders like Jawaharlal Nehru, Indira Gandhi, Sonia Gandhi, Rajiv Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi has become an article of faith. Narendra Modi’s emergence as one of the most powerful Indian politicians and the BJP’s electoral success have compelled the Congress to depend more on its family legacy and history for survival. The ‘naamdar’ versus ‘kaamdar’ narrative has rattled the Congress internally but very few in the party are actually willing to accept this reality.

Rahul Gandhi’s resignation on 25 May 2019 triggered an in-house debate in the Congress on whether the party could be headed by a non-Gandhi family member. But 75 days later, the party collectively decided to back Sonia Gandhi once again. The Congress leadership supports the Gandhis, which is why there are no challengers within the party. In uncertain times like now, the legacy of Nehru and current leaders like Sonia, Rahul and Priyanka give a sense of confidence and continuity. Together, the Congress is prepared to either swim or get drowned instead of getting fragmented and having to look for alternatives.


By Taran Deol and Revathi Krishnan