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In boost for India’s opposition, Nehru-Gandhi scion Priyanka gears up for electoral debut

  • Priyanka, who has often been compared to her grandmother and India’s first woman PM Indira Gandhi, will contest the Wayanad by-election

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Congress party leaders Rahul Gandhi (left) and his sister Priyanka Gandhi Vadra (second from right) arrive for a meeting in New Delhi on June 5. Photo: AFP

After years of shunning the spotlight, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, the scion of the Nehru-Gandhi family and granddaughter of India’s first female prime minister, has signalled that she is ready to take the political centre stage by contesting a parliamentary seat for the first time.

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“Priyanka is a great public speaker, and the moment is perfect for her to enter parliament,” Uday Chandra, an assistant professor of government at Georgetown University, told This Week in Asia.

Chandra said Priyanka’s political acumen would strengthen the opposition and she, along with other members of the Nehru-Gandhi family, “will make life very hard indeed for [Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government] in parliament”.

Priyanka spearheaded the recent election campaign of the opposition Indian National Congress in Uttar Pradesh and other parts of the country’s Hindi-speaking belts, where the party and its allies secured surprising victories to deny the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) an outright majority in parliament.

The 52-year-old has often been compared to her grandmother, Indira Gandhi, who served two terms as prime minister and commanded a mass following.

Rahul Gandhi during a rally in Coimbatore in April. Gandhi will retain the Raebareli seat he won in the election. Photo: AFP
Rahul Gandhi during a rally in Coimbatore in April. Gandhi will retain the Raebareli seat he won in the election. Photo: AFP

On Monday, Priyanka’s elder brother and Congress leader Rahul Gandhi resigned from one of two parliamentary seats he won in the election to make way for his sister to contest the constituency.

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