
Sonia Gandhi is not to contest from Amethi 8212; for now. That leaves no one any wiser about whether or not she will contest 8212; eventually. No matter. Indians are by now accustomed to taking things in their stride where Sonia Gandhi is concerned.
France had a queen in Marie Antoinette who would have her people eat cake when they had no bread. To judge Sonia8217;s insouciance, she could view herself as an uncrowned queen, and this one is inclined to have her cake and eat it too. Accountability, answerability, commitment: these are not principles that have inspired Sonia Gandhi on her long and painfully slow march into full-fledged politics. As in every single instance of her shadowy political career so far, what comes across from her latest refusal to be pinned down is a singular unwillingness to commit herself, a refusal to take responsibility for the results her campaign will have. All this while she has tacitly demanded authority, allegiance and commitment from others.
Actually contesting and winning would give Sonia a proven democratic mandate that would have to silence her critics. But she does have a very good reason for not trying to translate public approval into a genuine democratic mandate, even after being severely reviled. It is that her hold on her party is in inverse proportion to her direct exposure to the hurly-burly of public life. Sonia suits the Congress party as a trump card-in-abeyance, to be pulled out strategically. She has been sagacious enough to recognise this since her husband8217;s death. Coming out to campaign for the party has made her vulnerable to the attacks of democracy supporters. The next step to an election, although it might reinstate her in their eyes, would make her vulnerable to the sharks of her own party who would not hesitate to throw her to the dogs when it suited them. Perhaps Sonia will take that risk 8212; eventually. She remains enigmatic enough to defy prediction. But the reasons for her hesitation are not far to seek. And whatever her personal constraints, that still leaves her an extra-constitutional force in Indian politics.