Indian ruling party suffers election setback
India’s ruling Congress party and its famed Gandhi political dynasty suffered a stinging election setback yesterday in crucial state polls. Figures showed Congress, which runs the federal government in New Delhi, winning clearly in only one of five...
India’s ruling Congress party and its famed Gandhi political dynasty suffered a stinging election setback yesterday in crucial state polls.
Figures showed Congress, which runs the federal government in New Delhi, winning clearly in only one of five states and suffering a landslide defeat in Uttar Pradesh (UP), India’s most populous and politically significant state.
The polls were a mid-term popularity test for Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s scandal-tainted government ahead of 2014 elections, and were a first appraisal of Rahul Gandhi, the next in line in India’s top political family.
“I stood in front, so it is my responsibility,” 41-year-old Gandhi told reporters as he conceded defeat. “All of us in the Congress party fought. We fought well but the result which came was not so good.”
Mr Gandhi, a presumed prime-minister-in-waiting, led campaigning in Uttar Pradesh in a bid to revive Congress – his biggest challenge yet in a state where the party has a dismal record stretching back 22 years.
With all but a handful of results confirmed, Congress had won just 28 out of 403 seats, a trouncing that represented only a small increase on their miserly tally of 2007 despite Mr Gandhi’s tireless work at public rallies.