Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi today said that he was ‘absolutely ready’ to take over as the chief of the grand old party.
"I am absolutely ready to do that," he said while responding to a question during his address to students at University of California, Berkeley.
However, leaving the final decision to the party, Rahul said, "We have an organisational election process that decides that. And that process is currently ongoing. So we have an internal system where we elect certain delegates who make that decision. So for me to say that that decision is mine that wouldn't be very fair. That's a decision that the Congress Party has to make and that's a process that's currently going on right now."
Speaking about the reason for his party's debacle in previous elections, Rahul said that his party had around 2012 ‘stopped having conversations with people’ and thus it caused problem for it in the 2014 general elections.
"The vision that we laid out in 2004 was designed at best for a 10-year period. And it was pretty clear that the vision that we laid out in 2004 by the time we arrived in 2010-11 was not working anymore. Somewhere around 2012, and I say this, a certain arrogance crept into the Congress party. And they stopped having that conversation," the 47-year-old leader said.
When asked whether the Congress party was more associated with dynastic politics, Gandhi argued that India is being run by dynasties. "Most parties in India have that problem So...Mr Akhilesh Yadav is a dynast. Mr Stalin is a dynast... even Abhishek Bachchhan is a dynast. So that's how India runs. So don't get after me because that's how they India is run. By the way, last, I recall, Mr Ambanis are running the business. That's also going on in Infosys. So that's what happens in India."
But, he said there were a large number of people in the Congress Party who were not from dynastic families.
"And I can name them in every state. There are also people who happen to have a father, or a grandmother or a great grandfather in politics. They do exist," he said.
"The real question is the person actually capable person is the person a sensitive person and that's the question," he added.
He also said the BJP is implementing most of the programmes initiated during the Congress' rule.
"The central architecture they borrowed from us. But that architecture does not work. Because we know it. It stopped working," he said.
Rahul said that Mahatma Gandhi's idea of non-violence in India is under attack today. "The idea of non-violence is what has allowed this huge mass of people to rise up together."
He also criticised Prime Minister Narendra Modi's foreign policies. "Whereas I completely agree with their positioning as far as the (ties with) the US is concerned, I think they're making India vulnerable because, if you look at Nepal, the Chinese are there. If you look at Burma the Chinese are there. If you look at Sri Lanka, the Chinese are there. If you look at Maldives, the Chinese are there," he said.
"So on basic direction (of the foreign policy) I agree... friendship with the United States, close bond with United States. But don't isolate India, because it gets dangerous," Rahul said.
With PTI Inputs