*** Gandhi family scion takes a plunge into India’s political fray | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

Gandhi family scion takes a plunge into India’s political fray

Congress leader Rahul Gandhi appointed his charismatic sister Priyanka Gandhi Vadra to a senior party position yesterday that officials say will energise the campaign to oust Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the national election expected in a few months. Priyanka, 47, has campaigned for the Congress party in previous elections to help her brother, but largely stayed in the wings, letting her brother fully take the mantle of the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty that ruled India for most of its post-independence era.

Bearing a striking resemblance to her grandmother and former prime minister Indira Gandhi - who was known as “India’s iron lady” – Priyanka will be a Congress general secretary for Uttar Pradesh, the most populous state and key to the national poll. “We will play politics on the front foot,” Rahul Gandhi told reporters. “I am very happy my sister, who is very capable, will work with me.” Priyanka will oversee the eastern part of Uttar Pradesh, including the city of Varanasi, one of Modi’s political constituencies, the Congress party said in a statement.

Priyanka is seen as a more natural campaigner and a bigger draw than her brother, who appeared wooden during the last election. “We want to congratulate the Congress party on this move. Basically, they are saying Rahul has failed, now they need his sister,” said BJP spokesman Sambit Patra. The siblings’ great grandfather, Jawaharlal Nehru, was India’s first prime minister following independence from Britain in 1947.

Their grandmother, Indira Gandhi, succeeded him after a brief interval. After she was assassinated by her Sikh bodyguards in 1984, her son, Rajiv Gandhi, took over as premier. Rajiv was killed by an ethic Tamil suicide bomber while campaigning for a general election in 1991. His Italian-born widow, Sonia, initially resisted calls to enter politics before taking the plunge and lifting Congress’ flagging fortunes under her family’s brand name. Sonia Gandhi stepped back as her son took the reins of the party