Asia | Pantomime politics

India’s Congress party seems determined to prove its critics right

The Gandhi family and their toadies appear unable to relinquish any power

|DELHI

IT seemed like a test in a hero’s journey, that ancient Indo-European narrative form. On October 2nd Rahul Gandhi was delivering a message of love and brotherhood to his countryfolk in the state of Karnataka when the heavens opened. Unperturbed, the sodden princeling of the country’s main opposition party, the Congress, carried on. He was on only the 25th day of his five-month, 3,570km Bharat Jodo Yatra (Unite India march), a bid to revive his struggling party as the counterweight to the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) of Narendra Modi, the prime minister. “Neither rain, heat, nor storms can stop this yatra,” he extemporised.

This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “Pantomime politics”

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