Politics News: End of the road for L.K. Advani?

End of the road for L.K. Advani? 
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New Delhi, May 16: Age was not on his side. And now it seems people were not either. Verdict 2009 seems to have dashed the prime ministerial hopes of Bharatiya Janata Party's (BJP) 'iron man', 81-year-old, L.K. Advani forever. 

The 15th Lok Sabha election was arguably his last attempt to get the nation's top job in the twilight of his nearly five-decade-old political career, after being in the shadow of Atal Bihari Vajpayee for long. 

Advani - the "symbol of the BJP's ideological battle" as some in the Hindu rightwing fraternity call him - may be the clear winner from his Gandhinagar constituency but lost the bigger fight that he, his family and party members heavily invested in. 

With the rival Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) staging spectacular wins, it may well be the end of the road for Advani, whose Somnath to Ayodhya-Ram Janmabhoomi movement had put the right-of-centre party into political reckoning. 

"It seems that it is the end of the road for him. He will be too old to contest the polls after five years," political scientist Sudha Pai at the Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi, told IANS. 

It was Advani who had taken charge of the BJP's Hindutva campaign, with the Ayodhya movement culminating in the destruction of the Babri mosque in 1992 and putting the party in the political reckoning within less than a decade of returning just two MPs in 1984. 

But he lost the script somewhere in the compulsion of coalition politics that catapulted Vajpayee - the party's moderate face - to the post of prime minister, with Advani as the number two. 

His later attempts to reposition himself into the secular mode left the BJP leader with no clear identity of his own, some say. It started off with his 2005 Pakistan visit where he praised Mohammad Ali Jinnah. 

In his new avatar, Advani also put the cause of the Ram temple on the backburner. He was resurrected by his party and made the prime ministerial candidate since Vajpayee is out of action because of ill health. 

Advani spared no effort to reach out to every nook and cranny of the country, travelling more than 60,000-odd km, braving the sweltering heat with temperatures hovering around 40 degrees celsius. The octogenarian even lifted weights and pitched himself in cyberspace. 

His backroom boys worked round the clock, while the BJP leader also found time to interact with young and first-time voters on his website. 

Advani made a strong case for himself by his continuous tirade against Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, calling him weak and subservient to Congress president Sonia Gandhi. But it didn't work. 

"This is clearly a vote for Manmohan Singh, who is clean, capable, educated and intelligent; no other leader, including Advani, has these qualities. Advani lost it for the way he attacked Manmohan Singh, the way he behaved right through the campaign, " says Pai. 

The BJP's advertisements pitched Advani as a 'Loh Purush (iron man)', or tough leader, with pictures of him showing his fist. 

"Advani is a symbol of the BJP's ideological battle," said Tarun Vijay, former editor of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) mouthpiece Panchjanya. 

"There's no question of the end of the road for Advani or anybody. The BJP is not an individual centric party." 

But his being projected as the prime ministerial candidate does not seem to have cut much ice with voters. Some sections of the BJP privately said a younger leader like Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi could have probably helped the party do better. 

However, party general secretary Arun Jaitley said: "Advani was the NDA's face and this has not affected the party's overall performance." 

He clearly failed to recreate the magic of Vajpayee who straddled the political spectrum like a colossus. On Saturday, with the party's debacle, BJP president Rajnath Singh said the party missed Vajpayee in the elections. 

And now Advani may not get another chance. 

Politics News: Lok Sabha to host four Gandhis

All in the family: Lok Sabha to host four Gandhis 
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New Delhi, May 17: In an unparalleled feat for a political family, four members of the illustrious Nehru-Gandhi lineage would simultaneously occupy seats in India's 15th Lok Sabha, albeit in rival camps. 

With BJP's firebrand leader Varun Gandhi making it to the Lok Sabha for the first time, Parliament will be host to two mother-son duos of India's first political family representing two main political parties. 

While Congress President Sonia Gandhi and her son Rahul will be part of the ruling coalition, BJP leader Maneka Gandhi and her son Varun, the saffron party's latest poster boy will be seated on the opposition benches. This will be the first time four members of the family, though from its two estranged factions, will simultaneously be in the Lok Sabha that has for most part of its history seen at least one member of the Nehru-Gandhi clan.

The family debuted in Parliament's lower house with the formidable Jawaharlal Nehru, India's first Prime Minister, who occupied the seat from 1952 till the time of his death in 1964. Nehru's son-in-law Feroz Gandhi gave him company for most of his years in the Lok Sabha. Gandhi, husband of Nehru's daughter Indira was an MP from Pratapgarh constituency in Uttar Pradesh from 1952 to 1960.  
Source Manorama Online

Politics News: Sonia calls up Lalu, invites him to cabinet meet

Patna, May 17: In an apparent bid to reach out to her estranged ally, Congress President Sonia Gandhi telephoned Railway Minister Lalu Prasad and asked him to attend the Cabinet meeting scheduled for tomorrow.

"UPA chairperson rang up the Railway Minister last evening and requested him to attend a meeting of the union Cabinet on Monday," his private secretary Bhola Yadav said.

He, however, did not divulge what transpired during the telephonic talk between the two leaders coming in the backdrop of severe drubbing of RJD-LJP led Fourth Front had in Bihar. The Railway Minister, he said, is scheduled to leave for Delhi later in the day.

Lalu has not been attending cabinet meetings ever since he forged an alliance with LJP and Samajwadi Party. An apparently contrite Lalu, Congress' largest ally in the outgoing Lok Sabha, had yesterday admitted that not contesting the elections in alliance with the Congress was a big mistake.

"The decision to contest elections without the Congress on our side was a big mistake and I acknowledge it. However, it is a matter of great happiness for me that the Congress-led UPA is all set to form its government at the Centre," he had said.  


Source: manorama online

Politics News: Congress chief Sonia Gandhi and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh called up a joint press in Delhi and thanked the voters.

Total seats: 543
PartyLeadWonTotal
Cong + Allies1260261
BJP + Allies0157157
Third front06868
Fourth front12627
Others03030
Congress chief Sonia Gandhi and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh called up a joint press in Delhi and thanked the voters.


Politics News: Cong under YSR back in Andhra


Hyderabad

May 16: It’s YSR all the way without the cine glamour. The Congress under his leadership returned to power in the state winning 157 of the 294 seats in the state Assembly and contributing the single largest contingent of 33 MPs to the party at the Centre.

Neither the corruption charges against chief minister Y.S. Rajasekhar Reddy nor the Telangana sentiment have had much influence on the voters, who distinctly delivered their judgment, disproving the calculations of the political pundits of a hung Assembly.

Though the Congress put up a spectacular show in the Lok Sabha elections winning 33 of the 42 Parliament seats in the state, it had to struggle to secure simple majority in the Assembly polls. The party improved its LS tally by four seats as compared to the general elections held in 2004 when it won 29 seats. But in the case of the Assembly, its overall strength came down from 183 to 157, down by 26 seats.

The main Opposition Telugu Desam doubled its tally of seats in the Assembly and the Lok Sabha as compared to that of the 2004 general elections. The TD, which formed the Mahakutami with the TRS and the Left with the sole aim of defeating the Congress, failed to halt the YSR’s jaggarnaut.

Politics News: I want Rahul in my Cabinet: PM

New Delhi

May 16: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has said he will persuade AICC general secretary Rahul Gandhi to join his Cabinet, indicating a possible role for the Amethi MP in the new government.

"I have tried in the past to persuade him to join the government. I still wish Rahul Gandhi is a part of my Cabinet," said Prime Minister Manmohan Singh clarifying whether the young AICC general secretary will be given a responsibility in the government.

Thanking the people for the massive mandate for the Congress and the UPA government, the PM made overtures to the Left by saying that all secular parties must forget their past disputes and come together. "We will work together in a spirit of comradeship," he said.

The Prime Minister said it was his obligation to provide a government that was stable and committed to promoting secular values.

"We invite all Opposition parties to use this moment to convey to the world that at a time when the world is in serious difficulty, we stand one as a nation," Dr Singh said.

His appeal came at a time when the Left parties, which received drubbing in the Lok Sabha polls, said that they would sit in the Opposition.

Source: Asian Age

Politics News: King Cong

New Delhi

May 16: Led by Mrs Sonia Gandhi and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance stormed its way back to power on Saturday, securing close to an absolute majority in the 543-member Lok Sabha, sure it could make up the marginal difference with the help of Independents and some small parties. Congress managers appeared confident Saturday evening that running the government would get easier as it need not depend any longer on the support of outside allies, particularly of the Left.

The 15th general election threw up a far more decisive mandate than five years ago, with the UPA poised to secure 260 Lok Sabha seats. Of this, the Congress Party itself was set to get 201 seats.

The UPA’s triumph is expected to bring the curtain down on the six-decade-long political career of BJP stalwart Lal Krishna Advani, who indicated Saturday he did not want to continue as Leader of the Opposition. The NDA, under his leadership, was likely to end up with only 164 seats, of which the BJP was set to get 120.

The Left parties were the other big losers of the day — they had 59 MPs in the outgoing House but were projected to end up with only 24 seats in the new Lok Sabha. Its allies in the Third Front, including the Telugu Desam, BJD, BSP and JD(S), were set to get another 53 seats.

The so-called Fourth Front — comprising the Samajwadi Party, Rashtriya Janata Dal and Lok Janshakti Party — ended up with only 30 seats.

The Left’s major reverses also saw Mamata Banerjee’s Trinamul Congress back as a major force in the politics of West Bengal, where the CPI(M)-led front suffered its biggest Lok Sabha setback in the 32 long years that it has dominated the state. Ms Banerjee and the Congress, fighting the Left as part of a grand alliance, bagged 26 of the state’s 42 Lok Sabha seats.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, now all set to begin a second five-year term, has established a record of sorts: for the first time since the days of Indira Gandhi over three decades ago a PM who has completed a full term in office has been re-elected for a fresh innings.

The UPA is set to stake claim in a couple of days, with the 15th Lok Sabha required to be in place by June 2. Dr Singh will also be putting in place a new Cabinet, which might witness some changes from the outgoing team. Triumphant Mamata Banerjee is likely to return to the railway ministry, which she earlier headed in the NDA government of Atal Behari Vajpayee. RJD chief Lalu Prasad Yadav is expected to be retained in the government, but with a different portfolio.

While regional outfits such as Mayawati’s BSP, Mulayam Singh Yadav’s SP, Jayalalithaa’s AIADMK and newcomer Chiranjeevi’s Praja Rajyam fared poorly, two regional leaders who did extremely well were chief ministers Nitish Kumar (JD-U) in Bihar and Naveen Patnaik (BJD) in Orissa, with the latter also sweeping the simultaneous Assembly elections in the state, winning a record third term. Earlier this year Mr Patnaik had walked out of the NDA and later joined the Third Front.

The results in Andhra Pradesh were stunning. The Congress, contrary to all predictions, won 33 of the state’s 42 Lok Sabha seats, and its state government headed by Y.S. Rajashekhar Reddy beat the incumbency factor to secure a clear majority in the Andhra Pradesh Assembly polls.

The Congress’ equally remarkable revival in Uttar Pradesh, where it raised its Lok Sabha tally from nine to 21 seats after being marginalised in the state for decades, is being credited to the "go-it-alone" strategy of AICC general secretary Rahul Gandhi. Dr Manmohan Singh, talking to reporters at the party headquarters here on Saturday afternoon, with Mrs Gandhi by his side, said he would "try to persuade Rahul Gandhi to join the government."

[Mr Gandhi, however, sidestepped a question on this while talking to reporters at Sultanpur, UP, Saturday evening, pointing out that much more work needed to be done to gear up the Congress organisation. With his sister Priyanka by his side, he also said the credit for the victory could not go to any individual. "I believe that an individual can never accomplish anything on his own. It has to be a team effort." Mr Gandhi added he would try to ensure greater participation of the youth in the Congress.]

Congress insiders feel Ms Priyanka Gandhi Vadra had also played a major role in the victory. "Though Priyanka campaigned only for her brother and mother, she was highly visible in the media. This helped us," a Congress leader said. But while the Congress feels its decision to go it alone in UP helped, Samajwadi leader Amar Singh said the "results could have been even better" had it contested in alliance with the SP.

Speaking in New Delhi, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh offered an olive branch to all secular outfits and said "the secular parties should forget past disputes and come together to give this country a strong, stable and purposeful government. We will work in a spirit of comradeship."

Dr Singh, often the target of attack by the saffron brigade, also reached out to the BJP. "We should open a new chapter in relations between the government and the principal Opposition party. We seek your cooperation," Dr Singh told Mr L.K. Advani when the latter called to congratulate him on the UPA’s victory.

"We invite all Opposition parties to use this moment to convey to the world that at a time when the world is in serious difficulties, we in India stand as one nation," Dr Singh said, in a message that was also directed at the Left parties.

Source: Asian Age

News Vidoes: Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh with Party President Sonia

Prime Minister Dr.Manmohan Singh being welcomed by Congress President Sonia Gandhi when he reach to 10 Janpath and congress Supporters outside Sonia's residence, in New Delhi on Saturday. Video by RAJEEV TYAGI


News Videos: Azhar wins Moradabad seat


Congress leader Mohammad Azharuddin won Moradabad seat in the Lok Sabha Polls 2009.


News Videos: Advani calls Sonia to congratulate

Opposition leader LK Advani called Sonia Gandhi to congratulate her on the win. Advani couldn't speak to Manmohan as he was busy with meetings so he left a message.

News Videos: Rahul does it for Congress!



A special report on what clicked for the Congress party and how Rahul Gandhi turned the tide for Congress in the Lok Sabha polls 2009.

News Videos: We are confident we'll form the govt: Sachin Pilot

The Congress candidate from Dausa, Rajasthan, who is comfortably leading in the seat tally, says Congress will form the next government comfortably.


News Videos: Whatever may be the result, I want to thank everybody: Priya

Whatever may be the result, I want to thank everybody: Priya

News Videos : JP speaks after results

JP speaks after results


News Videos : Chiranjeevi 's Pressmeet after results

Chiranjeevi 's Pressmeet after results


News videos : Jayaho Congress YSR Jayaho...

Celebrations at YSR 's Camp Office


News Videos: Chandrababu Speaking after Results

Chandrababu Speaking after Results

News Videos : Andhra King Maker : YSR Speaks about his Success

Part1


Part2

News videos: Party has nothing to lose in New Delhi: VK Malhotra

New Delhi, May 16 (ANI): VK Malhotra, leader of India's main opposition party Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party has said that the party has nothing to lose if it does not win seats in the national capital. Malhotra, Addressing newsperson at the BJP headquarter in New Delhi, remarked that the party was hoping for an improved show in the capital, but then it did not have much to lose.

News video: Congress party and its allies celebrate victory



New Delhi/ Chennai, May 16 (ANI): Ruling Congress party and its allies across India are celebrating as Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's coalition appeared to be heading for a second term in office after a clear victory in the general election. Congress party leaders expressed joy and gaiety on the success of the party while talking to reporters in national capital New Delhi.

News Videos: BJP concedes election defeat


New Delhi, May 16 (ANI): India's main opposition Bharatiya Janata Party conceded defeat in the general elections on Saturday. Party spokesperson, Arun Jaitley said, the ruling Congress party-led alliance had the biggest mandate after the general election. Prime 
Minister Manmohan Singh's Congress-led coalition, riding on the back of years of economic growth, did better than expected and will probably be only just short of an outright majority.


News: Singh is king! Kingmakers are out...


New Delhi, May 16 (IANS) Kingmakers are out. There is only one king in this election. And that's Manmohan Singh, the prime ministerial candidate of the Congress-led UPA (United Progressive Alliance) that won with a decisive margin, belying predictions of a hung parliament.

At least half-a-dozen regional satraps who were harbouring prime ministerial ambitions and were itching to play kingmakers are now out in the cold.

Contrary to the pre-poll scenario, when both the Congress and the BJP were assiduously courting them in search of the elusive 272 halfway mark in parliament, the market value of the so-called kingmakers has dipped dramatically.

Almost all exit polls predicted a photo finish contest between the two leading political formations, fuelling ambitions of those who were bracing to drive hard political bargains.

Not sure of the numbers, a timorous Congress was courting Janata Dal-United (JD-U) leader Nitish Kumar despite his insistence that he was firmly in the NDA camp. Telugu Desam Party (TDP) chief N. Chandrababu Naidu, AIADMK leader J. Jayalalithaa, Biju Janata Dal chief Naveen Patnaik were among those the Congress was eyeing and had sent emissaries to woo.

Congress general secretary Rahul Gandhi even went to the extent of praising Nitish Kumar and Naidu as examples of good leaders outside the UPA fold - widely seen as overtures to the two who have carved their careers around anti-Congress politics.

The BJP, which was hoping to emerge at the head of the largest pre-poll alliance, too, unleashed a charm offensive. Senior BJP leader M. Venkaiah Naidu flew to Hyderabad to forge equations with Naidu, a former NDA ally. Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi rushed to Chennai to say it with flowers to Jayalalithaa, who was already declaring price for her support: the dismissal of the M. Karunanidhi government.

Others were broadcasting their wish list for potential suitors.

Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati's ambitions transcended mere deal-making as she fancied herself as a dark horse who could walk away with the prime ministerial trophy if her Third Front allies manage to get more than 100 seats. She was banking on her friend, Communist Party of India-Marxist leader Prakash Karat, who repeatedly said the Left Front would work to install a non-Congress, non-BJP government at the centre.

And Samajwadi Party leader Mulayam Singh Yadav went around saying unabashedly that his party's support would be for any alliance that would dismiss his bete noire Mayawati's government.

Now the long and twisted wish list of potential kingmakers lie in tatters as they wake up to the post-poll reality. The numbers, on which they were shoring up their dreams, are not simply not with them this time round.

Source: yahoo

News: Modi fails to weave magic beyond Gujarat

AHMEDABAD: The Modi magic had to face boundary lines in the 2009 Lok Sabha elections. The Hindutva poster boy and BJP’s star campaigner Narendra 
Modi could get his party a near sweep in his home state, Gujarat, but failed in Maharashtra for which he was the in-charge. In Gujarat, the BJP is leading in 16 out of 26 seats, while in Maharashtra it could manage just about nine seats. 


Modi failed not just in the 48-seat strong Maharashtra, but also in other states like Rajasthan, Punjab, Haryana, Orissa and Tamil Nadu, the states where he campaigned extensively, holding close to 300 meeting over 40 days. The BJP and its allies have lagged the UPA alliance in most of these states. The party’s performance could deal a major dent to the saffron leader, who had put the Godhra ghosts behind and was touted as the party’s next prime ministerial candidate. 

The Gujarat chief minister always led his party to stunning victories in Gujarat, the latest being the 2007 Gujarat assembly election. The party’s defeat in Maharashtra could very well be Modi’s first personal setback since he became the chief minister in 2001. 

While in Rajasthan, the party is barely leading on 4 seats against 20 set to be bagged by the Congress, in Maharashtra, the BJP is leading in only 9 seats against Congress’s 16 seats. While in Tamil Nadu, the BJP could win just one seat, in Punjab it managed a lead in 6 seats as against none in Haryana. In UP, it fared comparatively better with 11 seats. 


Source: timesofindia

News : Delhi shows the way for India

NEW DELHI: As capital cities go, Delhi doesn't just lead the way in social and economic development, it also mirrors who is worthy of ruling 

the country. 

Since the first elections in 1952, the party that won Delhi's heart has invariably ruled the country. 

In 1952, Delhi had only four Lok Sabha constituencies and the Congress bagged all of them and also formed the government at the Centre that year. 

This sweep continued in 1957 and 1962 too when the seats were increased to five. 

In 1967, Delhi had seven Lok Sabha seats of which the Congress retained only one. Though the Congress formed the government at the centre, it was the first time that it faced a significant opposition in Parliament. 

In 1971, Congress again bagged all seven seats in Delhi and retained power at the Centre. 

Six years later, Congress lost all seven seats to the then Janata Party due to the anti-emergency wave and for the first time a non-Congress government headed by Morarji Desai was formed at the centre in 1977. 

However, in 1980 Congress snatched back six seats and also managed to secure a term in office at the Centre. 

In 1984, after the assassination of Indira Gandhi, Congress again swept all the seven seats and Rajiv Gandhi became the prime minister. 

Five years later, Bofors scam dominated the political scene and Congress could win only two seats and lost five to BJP in 1989. A non-Congress government headed by V P Singh came to power at Delhi. 

Again in 1991, Congress managed to get only two seats - Sadar and Outer Delhi. But this time, however, Congress' Narasimha Rao formed a minority government. 

In 1996, Congress failed to improve its position and got only two seats, losing five to BJP and the power to rule. 

In 1998, Congress fared even worse. Meira Kumar was the sole Congress winner from Karol Bagh and the six other seats were captured by the BJP, whose leader Atal Bihari Vajpayee formed the government and the Congress warmed opposition benches in the lower house of Parliament. 

In 1999, BJP swept all seven seats in Delhi and remained in power at the Centre. 

Congress under Sonia Gandhi bagged six seats in the capital in the 14th Lok Sabha elections in 2004, ending an eight-year drought of power. 

The Congress-led UPA is all set to form the government this year, but there are no marks for guessing why.


Source: times of india

News: Everyone counts today

New Delhi:

On the eve of counting, the CPM categorically ruled out supporting the Congress directly or indirectly, quashing all talk of the Left allowing a minority government led by the Congress.

CPM general secretary Prakash Karat said there was no possibility of the Left supporting the Congress in any way. “If it is a minority government issue, then the Congress should support a Third Front government,” he told The Indian Express Friday. All the post-exit poll speculation on the Congress’s hunt for 272 revolves around what the Left and the Third Front will do.

CPM sources said the issue of backing a Congress-led minority government hasn’t been discussed yet.

The Left does not anticipate a repeat of 2004 when it was forced to support the Congress to keep the BJP out. The CPM has enlisted the support of Mayawati for a Third Front government. The BSP chief, it is learnt, will attend the May 18 meeting of the Front here.

Karat met BSP leader Satish Chandra Mishra Friday. “We are with the Left and will remain so. In the coming months, you will see that. And wherever the Left will go, we are with them,” Mishra said afterwards.

The CPM, it is learnt, has also opened a channel with the NCP. Karat has been in touch with BJD chief Naveen Patnaik, TDP’s Chandrababu Naidu, and JD(S)’s H D Deve Gowda to keep the Third Front together after May 16. The Left is, however, wary of Jayalalithaa’s moves.

Source: Indianexpress



News: Congress leading in 17 Andhra Pradesh Assembly seats


Hyderabad (PTI): Congress is leading in 17 Assembly seats, TDP in 14, PRP 3, TRS in 2, Independents 2 and CPI 1 after two-and-half hours of counting in Andhra Pradesh.

Among the key contestants Chief Minister Y S Rajasekhar Reddy, N Chandrababu Naidu and cine actor turned politician Chiranjeevi are leading with comfortable margins, CEO office sources said.

The Chief Minister's son Y S Jagan Mohan Reddy, who is contesting Kaddapah Parliament constituency, is also leading, according to trends available.

News: Manmohan Singh set to equal Vajpayee's record


NEW DELHI: If Atal Bihari Vajpayee can do, Manmohan Singh too can! 

Singh, 76, is set to even Vajpayee's feat of becoming Prime Minister for two consecutive terms with the Congress-led UPA emerging ahead in early trends. 

The alliance was projected to get 242-250 seats, just 20-30 short of majority in the lower house of Parliament. 

In 1999, Vajpayee made a spectacular return to power, becoming the first leader to do so since the 1970s. 

As counting of votes polled in Lok Sabha elections progressed, the answer was increasingly becoming clear that Singh, who in 2004 was unexpectedly named Prime Minister, was all set to reprise the role. 

The 76-year-old leader is the first person to be projected as PM candidate by the Congress which has lorded over the affairs of the country for 50 years of the six decades that India has been independent. 

Congress President Sonia Gandhi and party General Secretary Rahul Gandhi had thrown their weight behind his candidature and have often declared that the issue is "non-negotiable". 

If Singh becomes the Prime Minister again, he will also be the first Congress Prime Minister outside the Gandhi-Nehru family to do so and that too while heading a coalition government. 

After the Janata Party experiment in 1977 which saw two Prime Ministers Moraraji Desai and Charan Singh, Indira Gandhi came to power in 1980. After her assassination in October 1984, Rajiv Gandhi became Prime Minister following a landslide victory in the Lok Sabha polls. 

He could not repeat the magic in 1989 and chose to sit in the opposition despite the Congress emerging as the single largest party. 

Since then getting a majority in Parliament has virtually proved to be a mirage for political parties. 

While V P Singh was in the PM's chair for eleven months after the 1989 polls, Chandrashekhar who sprang a surprise on him lasted just four months. 

P V Narasimha Rao completed a full term from 1991 to 1996 while Atal Bihari Vajpayee who followed him lasted just a few days with his government being dubbed as "thirteen day wonder" by opposition Congress. 

H D Deve Gowda was then at the helm for 11 months and I K Gujral for four months. Then in 1998 and 1999 it was Vajpayee while Manmohan Singh caused an upset in 2004. 

Singh joined politics at the insistence of P V Narasimha Rao in 1991, when he joined Rao's government as Finance Minister and became the architect of the economic reforms process. While Rao failed to return to power, Singh has bettered his mentor.

Source: indiatimes

News: Congress springing big surprise in Uttar Pradesh

LUCKNOW: Surprising everyone but its staunch supporters, the Congress - powered by some indefatigable campaigning by Rahul Gandhi - appeared 
headed for its biggest comeback in Uttar Pradesh, the state that sends the maximum of 80 MPs, with trends indicating a huge leap for the country's ruling party. 


After three hours of counting, Congress was leading in over 20 seats, Samajwadi Party was also leading in 20 seats, the ruling Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP), that had proclaimed its potential of winning 40 to 50 seats, was leading in 21 seats while the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was trailing behind with leads in only 15 seats. Ajit Singh's Rashtriya Lok Dal (RLD) was ahead on just two seats so far, with he himself trailing. 

That the voters of Uttar Pradesh appeared to be veering towards national parties was visible in the early leads taken by both the Congress as well as the BJP in comparison to their showing in the 2004 elections. While Congress had won only nine seats then, the BJP's tally too stood at a paltry 10. 

While gains for the BJP had been predicted by most poll analysts, not many were willing to accept the existence of a Congress undercurrent in several parts of Uttar Pradesh, where it had been out of power for two long decades. This Lok Sabha election appears to have brought the party on a revival path in this state, where it held sway for the first four decades after independence. 

While the top leaders of all other parties were camping in New Delhi, BSP supremo and Chief Minister Mayawati preferred to keep herself confined within her official residence in Lucknow's Kalidas Marg, accessible only to a handful members of her inner coterie. 

According to some insiders, Mayawati was looking quite grim and worried over the party's performance. The BSP was the only party to have contested all the 543 seats across the country, but apart from the state, its leads were limited to one seat each in Himachal Pradesh Madhya Pradesh.

Source: Indiantimes