HomeNewsOpinionThe road ahead for Rahul Gandhi after May 2

The road ahead for Rahul Gandhi after May 2

Does Rahul Gandhi become the Congress’ leader in the south, while his sister Priyanka Gandhi Vadra handles northern India? Or will he still try to be the party president even if it were to mean a split in the party? 

April 05, 2021 / 08:59 IST
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File image: Priyanka Gandhi Vadra (left), Rahul Gandhi (centre) and Sonia Gandhi. (Image: PTI)
File image: Priyanka Gandhi Vadra (left), Rahul Gandhi (centre) and Sonia Gandhi. (Image: PTI)

Kerala saved the Congress, and its leader Rahul Gandhi, who was at the time party president, considerable embarrassment in the 2019 Lok Sabha polls. Two years since, as Kerala queues up to vote on April 6 to elect a fresh assembly, Gandhi and his lieutenants would hope for a repeat.

As in 2019, so now, Gandhi and his band of advisers have staked much on the party’s performance in Kerala. But unlike 2019, there could be disappointment in store for Gandhi and his team. Some opinion polls predict a return of the incumbent alliance, an event unprecedented in the last 40-years in the state.

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A defeat for the Congress-led United Democratic Front (UDF) at the hands of the incumbent Left Democratic Front (LDF) will strengthen Gandhi’s detractors within the Congress — the ‘group of 23’ senior leaders — triggering another round of recriminations.

In 2019, the Congress won 52 Lok Sabha seats, 15 of which were from Kerala. The people of Wayanad in Kerala also ensured Gandhi finds a seat in the Lok Sabha. Gandhi won from Wayanad but lost from his family pocket borough of Amethi, in Uttar Pradesh, which he represented for 15-years.