Old guard vs new
Coomi Kapoor, The Indian Express
March 16, 2008
http://www.indianexpress.com/story/284881.html

If any Congress member had charged that there was no internal democracy in the party, he would have been unceremoniously evicted for heresy. It would have been construed as a direct attack on the Congress first family. But when Rahul Gandhi himself made the accusation, it was a different matter. Many young MPs appended their signatures to a petition echoing Gandhi’s sentiments. Three days later, Gandhi back-tracked slightly by talking only of the need for internal democracy in the party’s youth wings, the Youth Congress and the NSUI, rather than the party as a whole. Gandhi said he had spoken on the need for internal democracy in all parties because wherever he went, young people kept asking him the same question, “We don’t know how to join a party.”

Many feel that the underlying text of Rahul’s statement is that the old guard should make way for the new. Rahul is not happy with several of his mother’s advisers. While the queens courtiers at 10 Janpath are old school politicians, the crown prince’s chosen people at Tuglaq Lane appear more professional yuppie types. In the grooming process for her son, Sonia Gandhi has ensured that trusted old-timers are included in key committees with which Rahul is associated. For instance, Veerappa Moily and Digvijay Singh are in the Committee for Future Challenges, along with young blood.