Sunday, January 20, 2013

India political heir Rahul Gandhi condemns elitism

India?s Congress party leader Rahul Gandhi, left, talks to his mother and party president Sonia Gandhi at a meeting of the party in Jaipur, India, Sunday, Jan. 20, 2013. Rahul Gandhi, the scion of India's Nehru-Gandhi political dynasty, was Saturday appointed the party vice president. The elevation positions him to lead the party, which his family has long dominated, in parliamentary elections next year.(AP Photo)

India?s Congress party leader Rahul Gandhi, left, talks to his mother and party president Sonia Gandhi at a meeting of the party in Jaipur, India, Sunday, Jan. 20, 2013. Rahul Gandhi, the scion of India's Nehru-Gandhi political dynasty, was Saturday appointed the party vice president. The elevation positions him to lead the party, which his family has long dominated, in parliamentary elections next year.(AP Photo)

India?s Congress party leader Rahul Gandhi, center, stands at a meeting of the party in Jaipur, India, Sunday, Jan. 20, 2013. Rahul Gandhi, the scion of India's Nehru-Gandhi political dynasty, was Saturday appointed the party vice president. The elevation positions him to lead the party, which his family has long dominated, in parliamentary elections next year. (AP Photo)

FILE ? In this Saturday, July 9, 2011 file photo, Congress party leader Rahul Gandhi greets supporters during a gathering of farmers at the end of a four-day march he undertook in the farmlands of northern India at Aligarh. Gandhi, the scion of the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty, was on Saturday elevated to governing Congress party's No. 2 position as it prepares for parliamentary elections next year, a party spokesman said Saturday, Jan. 19, 2013. (AP Photo/Saurabh Das, File)

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, left, greets Rahul Gandhi after he was appointed Vice President of the Congress party, in Jaipur, India, Saturday, Jan. 19, 2013. Gandhi, the scion of India's Nehru-Gandhi political dynasty, was on Saturday elevated to the governing Congress party's No. 2 post, positioning him to lead the party that his family has long dominated in parliamentary elections next year. (AP Photo)

Congress party supporters celebrate outside the party headquarters after the appointment of Rahul Gandhi as Vice President of the party, in New Delhi, India, Saturday, Jan. 19, 2013. Gandhi, the scion of India's Nehru-Gandhi political dynasty, was on Saturday elevated to the governing Congress party's No. 2 post, positioning him to lead the party that his family has long dominated in parliamentary elections next year. (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri)

JAIPUR, India (AP) ? Rahul Gandhi, the heir to India's Nehru-Gandhi political dynasty, said Sunday he would work to transform the country by decentralizing power after he was elevated to the governing Congress party's No. 2 post.

His career is the ultimate expression of Congress' reliance on the Gandhi family name, but the man widely expected to be the party's candidate for prime minister in next year's elections on Sunday condemned elitism as "the tragedy of India" and vowed to work to expand access to power for ordinary people.

"For me, the Congress party is my life. The people of India are my life and I will fight for them," Gandhi, a 42-year-old lawmaker, said in his acceptance speech Sunday in the western Indian city of Jaipur, a day after he was appointed the party vice president, a position behind his mother Sonia Gandhi, who is the Congress party president.

Reflecting on his eight years while working for the party organization, Rahul Ganhi said India's governmental system was struck in the past and the answer lay in completely transforming it.

"A handful of people control the entire political space. We don't respect knowledge, We respect position," he said to cheering party workers.

"If you don't have position, you have nothing. That's the tragedy of India," he said.

Rahul Gandhi also said many Indian youths are angry because they have been excluded from the political class.

"We only empower people at the top of the system. We don't believe in empowering all the way to the bottom," he said.

However, opposition parties are already seizing on the fast political rise of Rahul Gandhi ? the son, grandson and great-grandson of Indian prime ministers ? to brand Congress as nepotistic and elitist.

Arun Jaitley, a leader of the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party, said Rahul Gandhi's elevation in the Congress party was a move to convert the world's largest democracy into a dynastic one. Jaitley said the leader of his party was decided on the basis of ability, not lineage.

In 2004, Manmohan Singh, a technocrat, was chosen to fill the prime minister's seat in 2004 by Sonia Gandhi, the Congress leader and widow of assassinated Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi.

Singh has been widely seen as a regent, keeping the seat warm until Rahul Gandhi was ready to take what some see as his birthright.

But Gandhi has displayed little public sign that he is undergoing any sort of apprenticeship that would prepare him for running the country. He has never held a Cabinet-level position.

Party workers have been demanding Rahul Gandhi's elevation for years, but he had been shying away from holding a top position in the party.

His supporters argued he was rebuilding the party at the grassroots level and has taken a lead in the Congress' campaigns in state elections in Uttar Pradesh and in Bihar in recent years. The party performed poorly in both states' elections last year.

Rahul Gandhi entered politics in 2004 and became a lawmaker from Amethi seat in northern Uttar Pradesh state. The parliamentary seat was held by his mother until she shifted to a neighboring constituency.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-01-20-AS-India-Rahul-Gandhi/id-7e5477d625014e8ba9405a5607a50b1f

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