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View | Congress presidential polls: Party must learn the game of optics to challenge BJP

Yet, with Shashi Tharoor deciding to make it a contest despite Kharge being the unstated candidate of the Nehru-Gandhi family, the Congress can at least claim that it did have an election.

By Vikas Pathak  Oct 17, 2022 9:40:28 PM IST (Published)

6 Min Read

The election of the Congress president after decades may not mark a change in the way the party is run, but it does provide the party the opportunity to change its optics in a limited manner. However, this too shall depend on the extent to which Congress is willing to play the game.
The starting isn't too great. What should have been shown by the Congress as an open contest between an experienced Dalit leader, Mallikarjuna Kharge, and a suave, cosmopolitan face, Shashi Tharoor, is being seen as a cakewalk for Kharge, a family loyalist, who is coming across as the 'official' candidate. Unless the Congress is careful, the message of a second remote control, a term widely used by critics of Dr. Manmohan Singh, may soon become the dominant narrative. However, Congress can make symbolic gains if it plays its cards well.
Facing the charge that it is a dynastic party, the Congress is finally open to a party chief from outside the Nehru-Gandhi family, even if the person, in this case, Kharge, may just take cues from Sonia Gandhi or Rahul Gandhi.