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Home  » News » Mallikarjun Kharge's Litmus Test

Mallikarjun Kharge's Litmus Test

By Aditi Phadnis
August 30, 2023 10:24 IST
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The coming assembly and Lok Sabha elections -- the choice of candidates, the campaign strategies and the negotiations with other Opposition parties -- represent the real test for Mallikarjun Kharge.

IMAGE: Congress Parliamentary Party Chairperson Sonia Gandhi and Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge during the 25th Rajiv Gandhi National Sadbhavana Award at Jawahar Bhawan in New Delhi, August 20, 2023. Photograph: Ayush Sharma/ANI Photo
 

Mapanna Mallikarjun Kharge is possibly the second leader in the history of independent India who has been the Leader of the Opposition in both the Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha and the president of a national party (L K Advani was the other).

This testifies to the breadth of political experience of the 81 year old.

This year, he made history for another reason. He became the first and only leader of Opposition to miss the Red Fort address of a prime minister, ostensibly for health reasons, something the Bharatiya Janata Party refused to believe.

During his reply to the vote of confidence, Prime Minister Narendra D Modi taunted the Congress for the lack of respect shown to the Leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha, Adhir Ranjan Choudhury, by his party.

Earlier, he had similarly attacked the Congress leadership/Gandhi family for disrespect to Mr Kharge.

Speaking at an election rally in Belagavi, Mr Modi said he respected the veteran leader but was dismayed that the Congress did not: 'Mallikarjun Kharge has served the public in whatever way possible ... I was disheartened to see how the most senior leader, the president of the Congress, has been disrespected by them ... The world knows who has the remote control.'

For reasons best known to the Congress, it refrained from retorting that the BJP would rather forget Atal Bihari Vajpayee than remember him, although there is ample evidence for this, both in foreign and domestic policy.

Mr Kharge's acceptability within the party lies in his career in politics.

He's had a good record of winning elections.

Barring the Lok Sabha election in 2019, when he lost his home borough, Karnataka's Gulbarga, to the BJP, he has never lost.

He won from the Gurmitkal assembly constituency in Karnataka nine times in a row before he plunged into the Lok Sabha poll arena in 2009.

He won from Gulbarga in 2014, when the tide was against the Congress.

Mr Kharge began life as a trade union lawyer and knows what it is to struggle.

What he really wanted was to become chief minister -- from 1972, when he won from the Gurmitkal assembly constituency and became a minister in the Devaraj Urs government in 1976.

He was a minister in the Gundu Rao ministry in 1980, the S Bangarappa cabinet in 1990, and in the M Veerappa Moily government from 1992 to 1994.

His role changed in 1994, when he became the Opposition leader in the assembly.

In 1999, he was among the contenders for chief minister, but was pipped to the post by S M Krishna.

In 2004, it was Dharam Singh who bested him. In 2013, the BJP government in Karnataka fell, but again Mr Kharge lost the chance. Siddaramaiah got the top job.

From 2014 to 2019, Mr Kharge fought insult and humiliation and, worse, on behalf of the Congress.

There are several committees on which the presence of the Leader of the Opposition is mandatory -- to select the chief of the Central Bureau of Investigation and the central vigilance commissioner, to name just two.

He boycotted the meetings to select the Lokpal because he was invited to participate as a 'special invitee' with no powers, since he was not recognised as leader of the Opposition in the Lok Sabha.

The less charitable in the party say he owes his present appointment to the grace of Sonia Gandhi -- the family wanted someone who wouldn't talk back and would not exert himself too much -- basically an unquestioning, unthreatening loyalist.

His son Priyank is a minister in the Karnataka government, so the lineage is assured.

But Mr Kharge is no Manmohan Singh. The upcoming Assembly and Lok Sabha elections -- the choice of candidates, the campaign strategies and the negotiations with other Opposition parties -- represent the real test for Mallikarjun Kharge.

Feature Presentation: Aslam Hunani/Rediff.com

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Aditi Phadnis
Source: source