HomeNewsOpinionUS Elections | Results to the Senate bring good tidings for the US-India ties

US Elections | Results to the Senate bring good tidings for the US-India ties

While much of the attention in India has been on the US presidential race, results of the biennial elections to the Senate have put India on a strong wicket America-wide, and on Capitol Hill

November 06, 2020 / 12:58 IST
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Image: AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, File
Image: AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, File

This was what happened four years ago on November 8, the election day in the United States. Mark Warner, the senior Senator from Virginia, arrived at Lyles Crouch Elementary School in Alexandria, a suburban polling station where voting was apace, to give a shot in the arm to Democratic Party foot soldiers for presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.

I ran to Warner, but the popular former Governor had already been surrounded by enthusiastic Virginians eager to shake his hand and be photographed with him. Unable to attract his attention in the crowd, I committed the transgression of pulling at his shirt sleeve, simultaneously calling out his name. With a look of extreme annoyance, he turned to me and I quickly popped my question: “Senator, will you continue as Co-Chair of the India Caucus in the new Senate?”

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Warner saw my media badge and when I put the question, he visibly softened. But he avoided a direct answer. After all, it was not up to him to retain the position: the Democrats in the Caucus have to choose their co-chair by consensus. “It was the first country-focused caucus established in the Senate,” he told me. “Its work is important. We have done a lot to promote relations between the United States and India.”

As it turned out, Warner once again became the Caucus co-chair when the new Senate convened in January 2017, and remains in his post. In the November 3rd election, Warner, a reliable friend of India on Capitol Hill, won his third consecutive term in the Senate. In January 2021, once the new upper chamber of the US Congress is in place, it will be known whether Warner will serve yet another term as co-chair of the Senate India Caucus.