- Oct 9, 1999
- 46,873
- 10,668
- 147
From the NY Times:
Sonia Gandhi, who led the Indian National Congress to unexpected triumph in India's elections, told her party's legislators tonight that she would "humbly decline" the post of prime minister.
In the six years since she had reluctantly entered politics, she told party members gathered in the central hall of Parliament, "one thing has always been clear to me and that is ? as I have often stated ? that the post of prime minister has not been my aim."
She had always vowed, she said, that were this situation ever before her, "I would follow my inner voice."
Mrs. Gandhi, the Italian-born widow of a former prime minister, added: "Today that voice tells me I must humbly decline this post."
She had been under "tremendous pressure" to reconsider, she said, "but I must follow my voice." She was not, she said, tempted by power.
She appealed to her party's legislators to respect her decision and recognize its strength, but there was no sign they would do so. The hall erupted as she spoke, and legislators began impassioned speeches begging her to reconsider.
"You cannot betray the people of India," said Mani Shankar Aiyar, a member of Parliament's lower house. "The inner voice of the people of India says that you have to become the prime minister of India."
Another member, Kapil Sibal, said, "Unless you are there our inspiration will not be there."
News reports said she would support Dr. Manmohan Singh, a former finance minister, as prime minister. A Sikh, he would be India's first minority prime minister.
The Congress is the largest party in India's new Parliament and is poised to form its government. Campaigning tirelessly across the country, Mrs. Gandhi had led the party and its allies to a dramatic upset over the Hindu nationalist-led coalition that had governed the party for the past six years.
Rajiv Desai, a longtime adviser to the Gandhi family, said Mrs. Gandhi had never wanted to be prime minister. Rather, she had wanted to revive the Congress party and defeat the Hindu nationalists, whom she saw as a threat to India's secular identity as it had been defined by her husband's grandfather, Jawaharlal Nehru.
On Monday night, she told senior party members and allies that she did not want to be prime minister, but had been pressured to change her mind, Mr. Desai said. Today she changed it back.
Sonia Gandhi, who led the Indian National Congress to unexpected triumph in India's elections, told her party's legislators tonight that she would "humbly decline" the post of prime minister.
In the six years since she had reluctantly entered politics, she told party members gathered in the central hall of Parliament, "one thing has always been clear to me and that is ? as I have often stated ? that the post of prime minister has not been my aim."
She had always vowed, she said, that were this situation ever before her, "I would follow my inner voice."
Mrs. Gandhi, the Italian-born widow of a former prime minister, added: "Today that voice tells me I must humbly decline this post."
She had been under "tremendous pressure" to reconsider, she said, "but I must follow my voice." She was not, she said, tempted by power.
She appealed to her party's legislators to respect her decision and recognize its strength, but there was no sign they would do so. The hall erupted as she spoke, and legislators began impassioned speeches begging her to reconsider.
"You cannot betray the people of India," said Mani Shankar Aiyar, a member of Parliament's lower house. "The inner voice of the people of India says that you have to become the prime minister of India."
Another member, Kapil Sibal, said, "Unless you are there our inspiration will not be there."
News reports said she would support Dr. Manmohan Singh, a former finance minister, as prime minister. A Sikh, he would be India's first minority prime minister.
The Congress is the largest party in India's new Parliament and is poised to form its government. Campaigning tirelessly across the country, Mrs. Gandhi had led the party and its allies to a dramatic upset over the Hindu nationalist-led coalition that had governed the party for the past six years.
Rajiv Desai, a longtime adviser to the Gandhi family, said Mrs. Gandhi had never wanted to be prime minister. Rather, she had wanted to revive the Congress party and defeat the Hindu nationalists, whom she saw as a threat to India's secular identity as it had been defined by her husband's grandfather, Jawaharlal Nehru.
On Monday night, she told senior party members and allies that she did not want to be prime minister, but had been pressured to change her mind, Mr. Desai said. Today she changed it back.
