Rahul Gandhi’s cross-India ‘unity march’ against hate enters capital
- The cross-country walk aims to showcase ‘the real India’, as opposed to PM Narendra Modi’s ‘hate-filled’ version, and pull Congress party out of political wilderness
- While the march has attracted crowds, only electoral victories will define whether it is successful, analyst says
Joined by thousands of party workers and senior leaders, the march led by Rahul Gandhi, an opposition leader of the Congress party and scion of the influential Gandhi family, entered New Delhi after passing through eight states.
“They will spread hate. We will spread love,” Gandhi said, referring to Modi’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
Gandhi set off for the “Bharat Jodo Yatra”, or “Unite India March”, in Kanyakumari, a coastal town that is the southernmost tip of India, on September 7. The march, which is broadcast live on a website, is expected to traverse 3,570km (2,218 miles) and cross 12 states before finishing in Indian-controlled Kashmir by February.
Passing through hundreds of villages and towns, the march has attracted farmers worried about rising debt, students complaining about increasing unemployment, civil society members and rights activists who say India’s democratic health is in decline. Along the way, Gandhi has also shed his formerly clean-shaven look for a thick beard and slept in shipping container cabins during night halts.
Modi’s party has dismissed Gandhi’s march and speeches as a political gimmick to regain his “lost credibility”.
“The character of the Congress has been to break India,” the party said in a tweet on Saturday.
Can Rahul Gandhi’s march help Congress outrun BJP in India polls?
Hindu nationalism has surged under Modi and his party, which have been criticised over rising hate speech and violence against Muslims in recent years. Opponents say Modi’s silence emboldens right-wing groups and threatens national unity, but his party has denied this.
Even though the Congress party says Gandhi’s cross-country walk is mainly to reestablish an emotional connection with Indians, the march’s electoral ambitions are hard to miss.
With a national election less than 16 months away, it could determine whether India’s beleaguered opposition can put up a fight against the electoral juggernaut of Modi’s party that won the majority in 2014 and 2019.
Rasheed Kidwai, a political analyst, said Gandhi was “employing some politically correct methods during his long walk that has potential to do some image correction for him”. But he cautioned that only electoral victories will in the end define whether Gandhi’s march is successful.
“Modi’s BJP has a success rate of about 90 per cent in over 200 parliamentary seats where it’s in direct contest with the Congress. If this march reduces that rate, that would be quite a success. In a democracy, it is important to be relevant and win elections,” Kidwai said.
In 2019, Modi’s party won 303 out of 543 parliamentary seats, in part due to its Hindu nationalistic agenda. Congress was a distant second with 52 seats.
Since Modi came to power for the first time in 2014, the Congress party has also suffered crushing defeats in a slew of state polls. It currently rules only three out of 28 states.
Plagued by leadership crisis and electoral routs, the party in October elected its first non-Gandhi president after 24 years in an attempt shed an image of being run by a single dynasty.
The party has been led by non-family members in the past, but Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi had been at its helm since 1998.
The march has helped Gandhi, ratings show.
In November, polling agency C-Voter said Gandhi’s popularity ratings had seen a slight jump since the march began, from 29 per cent to 31 per cent. The marginal improvement in Gandhi’s popularity, however, remains well below that of Modi’s 66 per cent.