Pranab Mukherjee

From Indpaedia
Revision as of 19:10, 13 September 2020 by Jyoti Sharma (Jyoti) (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search

Hindi English French German Italian Portuguese Russian Spanish

This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.



Contents

A profile

From the archives of India Today , June 5, 2009

There are no quickfix solutions to an economic slowdown. Yet this veteran political warhorse is today expected to do just that—apply the healing gel to the deep ruptures left by a global financial tsunami. And that too with the “cool-headed” calculations he uses to troubleshoot for the Congress or answer questions from eager scribes, never giving away more than intended.

Style statement : Loves music, especially Bengali folk.

Priorities:

• A bold reform stimulus which would rev up growth dynamics and propel the country towards the 9 per cent plus growth path.

• Step up investment in infrastructure.

• Stimulate demand by reducing personal income tax rates, tweak customs duty structure to accelerate exports.

• Tackle the fiscal deficit by shoring up government revenues and cutting down on borrowings.

Mukherjee boasts of a unique combination of political sensibility and allegiance to free market economics. He has the ability to balance the political need for pro-growth populism with the economic imperative of prudence.

Given his vast experience and his understanding of the complex economic landscape, almost everyone expects him to deliver a dream budget in July and spur growth.

Milestones

September 1, 2020: The Times of India

In a political career of more than 50 years, Pranab Mukherjee left his mark everywhere, from Rajya Sabha to Lok Sabha and from the finance, defence and foreign ministries to the office of the President

1935-1960s

Born on December 11, 1935, in Mirati village in West Bengal’s Birbhum, Mukherjee did his college in Calcutta and married Suvra, a Rabindra Sangeet singer and artist, in 1957. The couple has two sons — Abhijit and Indrajeet — and a daughter, Sharmistha

1969 After early stints as a college teacher and journalist, he was elected to Rajya Sabha as a Bangla Congress member. He would be reelected to the Upper House in 1975, 1981, 1993 and 1999

1973

He first became a Union minister under PM Indira Gandhi, serving in multiple ministries. In 1980, when Congress returned to power, he was minister of commerce, and steel and mines

1982

First stint as Union finance minister. But after Indira’s assassination in 1984, he fell out with her son Rajiv and was moved out. He left Congress in 1986 to float his own outfit but was back in the Congress fold in 1989

1991-2004

Under PV Narasimha Rao as PM, Mukherjee was named deputy chairman of Planning Commission in 1991. He went on to serve as minister of commerce, and then foreign affairs, under Rao

2004-2012

Won his first Lok Sabha polls from Jangipur in Bengal. Under the UPA-I and -II governments, Mukherjee served as minister of defence, foreign affairs and finance

2012-2017

Served as 13th President of India from July 2012 to July 2017, entering office during UPA-I and finishing under NDA


Career in a nutshell

September 1, 2020: The Times of India

Pranab Mukherjee, whose career on the national political stage began as a Rajya Sabha MP in 1969 and ended as President in 2017, Mukherjee was one of only three ministers in Independent India to have held three CCS (cabinet committee on security) positions: finance, defence and external affairs. He was also leader of the House in Rajya Sabha and Lok Sabha.

A Congressman all the way, Pranab worked with 3 PMs A Congressman all his political life, barring a brief period when he fell out with Rajiv Gandhi, Mukherjee worked with three PMs: Indira Gandhi, whose attention he first caught, P V Narasimha Rao and Manmohan Singh. After his return to Congress, his career was revived by Rao who appointed him deputy chairman of the Planning Commission. However, he was passed over for the PM’s job in 2004 when Sonia Gandhi chose Manmohan Singh. Mukherjee received the Bharat Ratna, the nation’s highest honour, last year, a recognition that stood out because it was conferred at the behest of a government belonging to a party he had consistently opposed. Earlier, BJP’s allies JD(U) and Shiv Sena had broken ranks from their NDA partners to support his presidential bid. Though not a mass leader — he won only one Lok Sabha election, in 2004 and never made a mark in state politics — he was the go-to man in successive governments for trouble-shooting assignments. He was a key negotiator with the Left on the India-US nuclear deal till the communists parted ways with the UPA. He also spearheaded the UPA government’s unsuccessful effort to defang the anti-corruption movement that launched Aam Aadmi Party and help clear the way for Narendra Modi’s win in the 2014 LS elections. A government reply to a Parliament question in 2010 (UPA-2) said Mukherjee was heading all empowered GoMs expect one and was head of 15 of 34 other GoMs. Seen as ‘Mr Fixit’ in UPA-1 and 2, he headed eGoMs on 3G spectrum, procurement and management of foodgrain, drought management, gas pricing, price band of PSU shares, mega power projects and mass transit systems. In all, he headed 95 GoMs during his time in the two UPA governments.

Mukherjee is survived by two sons and a daughter. Abhijit Mukherjee, a former MP, broke the news of his father’s death. His daughter Sharmistha has been active in politics and was spokesperson for the Delhi Congress.

Some important events

A

Subhodh Ghildiyal, September 1, 2020: The Times of India

Prez Who Could Have Been PM

From The Indira Era To Modi’s India, He Remained An Unparalleled Politician And A Statesman

A man who did not hesitate to express his views, Mukherjee ignored the dismay in the ranks of the party he had been a part of and went right ahead and quoted Jawaharlal Nehru, often at the receiving end of the Sangh Parivar’s attacks, in his speech. But, the inherent message that he did not see R S S as “untouchable” served to underline how he had been courted by BJP and PM Narendra Modi. For someone who saw so much and travelled so far from the remote Mirati village in Birbhum, the end can hardly define the contradictions life in politics can be and which Mukherjee negotiated with aplomb. He was at the centre of action during UPA, heading a record number of GoMs and playing chief troubleshooter despite a trust deficit with the Gandhis that never quite went away. The roots of the latent discord went back to 1984 when Mukherjee fell out with Rajiv Gandhi in the wake of Indira Gandhi’s assassination. He denied harbouring leadership ambitions and said Rajiv was misled. Being dropped from the cabinet in 1984 was a shock, and after parting ways with Congress, he returned six years later. When the time came, he proved a dependable guide for Sonia Gandhi as she stepped into a new political role, entering Parliament in 1999.

If he continued to rise, it was because Mukherjee was a manager par excellence who worked across the communal, secular, socialist, capitalist and corporate aisles and formed part of a group that did not have enemies but only rivals in politics. Today, the likes of Sharad Pawar and Mulayam Singh Yadav are fading. Mukherjee was the best of the bunch.

For all his political friendships, Mukherjee was a dyed-in-the-wool Congressman, a key planner and strategist irrespective of whether the party was in office or in Opposition. His sharp mind caught Indira Gandhi’s attention and she brought him to Rajya Sabha, making him deputy and minister of state for economic portfolios before he became finance minister in 1982. He never forgot his debt to his mentor, often recalling her as India’s greatest PM and a realist who ordered Pokhran 1.

Mukherjee continued to hold important assignments in the Narasimha Rao government as deputy chair of Planning Commission and then as cabinet minister. He was Rao’s choice for political tasks, too. His report on the Tamil Nadu situation ahead of the 1996 polls proved prophetic. He advocated an alliance with DMK, advice that Rao ignored, leading to G K Moopanar and P Chidambaram forming Tamil Maanila Congress. TMC and DMK swept the state, making a crucial difference for Rao and Congress.

Later, Mukherjee accepted Sonia’s choice of Manmohan Singh as PM, but was never shy of asserting himself. Officials waiting outside cabinet meetings would recall that his loud tones often filtered out, indicating he was doing most of the talking. In the aftermath of the 26/11 attacks, he unleashed verbal salvos against Pakistan daily, blunting more than Singh BJP’s calls for action. Mukherjee was a one-stop shop in UPA, the intersection of politics, policy, ego and turf issues. He did not back away from scraps himself, clashing with Chidambaram over several issues. Their “joint appearance” outside North Block in September 2011 where Mukherjee distanced himself from a note on 2G spectrum will remain a photo op etched in memory. A few months earlier, he had created a stir by writing to Singh saying he suspected a bugging device in his office.

And yet, for all his qualities, the PM’s post remained elusive. High-profile and independentminded, his previous revolt made him unsuitable for the top job when UPA defeated BJP in 2004. Sonia picked Singh, qualified, dependable and bereft of any political and corporate baggage. Mukherjee could not be home minister either – a post that was too powerful for an intrepid politician. Too smart to get stuck on a missed bus, Mukherjee set his sights on a new goal – Rashtrapati Bhavan. He worked hard to win allies across parties. When the time came, he did not appear to be the first choice. This time Mukherjee anticipated the resistance and forced Congress’s hand as “secular” votaries like Mulayam Singh Yadav backed him. On one particular night, Ahmed Patel sat with “dada” till the wee hours, assuring him he was indeed the party’s choice.

Mukherjee was not just an astute politician. He earned respect for his encyclopaedic knowledge of history and the Constitution. He was a key arbiter of the India-US nuclear deal during which he kept the Left engaged – and distracted – until it was too late for the comrades to block the pact. For a man of staunch secular beliefs, he could see religion in a cultural context. Every Durga Puja, he would be in Jangipur and don the bhadralok dhoti and kurta, flaunt his janeu and immerse himself in a 10-day prayer. He used it to good effect in Parliament as he tore into BJP’s political Hindutva by quoting scriptures to highlight the heterogeneity of thought in Hinduism.

Mukherjee ascended even higher when he was bestowed the Bharat Ratna by the Modi government. While Congress leaders attended the award ceremony, the Gandhis and Manmohan Singh did not. By then, Mukherjee had risen above partisan fault lines even as he remained a Congressman by conviction.


B

September 1, 2020: The Times of India

How Dada climbed Raisina Hill when Race Course Road closed

The presidency was the capstone on Pranab Mukherjee’s long political career, but it nearly eluded him for the same reason that he couldn’t become Prime Minister. His widely reported ambition to be PM at Rajiv Gandhi’s expense, after Indira Gandhi’s assassination, had earned him the lifelong distrust of the Gandhi family and its loyalists. Even when he returned to the fold and ably played troubleshooter for the UPA, doubts about his ‘loyalty’ persisted and he was overlooked for the post of home minister in 2004. The same distrust stood in Mukherjee’s way in May 2012, when 10 Janpath — shorthand for the Congress high command — rejected CPM leader Prakash Karat’s pitch to elect him President.

Sonia Gandhi chose Vice President Hamid Ansari instead with an eye on Muslim votes. Mukherjee’s rejection was couched in the claim of his “indispensability” to the government. But he wasn’t taken in by it, nor was he consoled by the offer of the vice presidency, knowing that he could be a consensus candidate drawing support from non-UPA quarters.

Faced with a firm high command, he stuck to the “loyal soldier of the party” playbook, but never discouraged those, including non-Congress politicians, who felt he would make a better President.

He was back in the reckoning when Samajwadi Party, a big factor in the electoral college because of its emphatic win in the UP assembly polls, decided to frustrate Congress’ plan to dent its support among Muslims by sending Ansari to Rashtrapati Bhavan. Mamata Banerjee, who also had significant heft in the electoral college, was not quite enamoured of Mukherjee but she didn’t want to help Congress with Muslim votes either.

Since opposing Ansari would have cost them Muslim votes, Mulayam and Mamata proposed the candidature of another Muslim, former President APJ Abdul Kalam. The choice was anathema to Congress and Sonia because Kalam owed little to Congress for his first ter m and had remained war m towards BJP.

Congress was forced to take a fresh look at Mukherjee’s claim, which became stronger when the Left and DMK refused to support Mulayam and Mamata.

Kalam’s refusal to take the field unless he had the numbers also helped Dada. Mulayam dumped Kalam, triggering speculation about the invisible hand of the “friends of Pranab” club. Mamata also wisely chose not to become an obstacle in the way of a ‘bhadralok’ taking over as First Citizen.

As for the ‘high command’, it was left with the feeling of being outmanoeuvred by someone whose wiles had helped it get the better of opponents.

The person

Glimpses

September 1, 2020: The Times of India

A NATURAL AT FINANCE

Pranab Mukherjee’s aptitude for finance was apparent early in his life. Elder brother Piyush once recalled how he eked out treats from the exact change their mother gave them for groceries. “Ma counted the exact change, but will she measure the exact weight of the groceries?” he reassured his brother. Daughter Sharmistha remembers him as a tough negotiator in money matters. She usually got “4-5%” of what she had asked for with the lament that she was “a chor, daku, shashtrapani (thief, robber and armed gangster).” If gifts were available in a price range of Rs 1,000-20,000, Pranabda would say, “Go for Rs 1,000”.

BOOKWORM, NO TIME FOR FILMS

Armed with two MAs – history and political science – and an LLB, Mukherjee worked as a clerk, a college teacher and a journalist before coming to politics but his love of reading didn’t leave him. He had no time for films, and once famously failed to recognise actor-turned-MP Vinod Khanna in Parliament. Books and file notings were a different matter, though. He once silenced NDA MPs who objected to his claim that Hindu scriptures contain references to drunken behaviour by gods, by rattling off the relevant shlokas. In the PV Narasimha Rao government, he rejected the agriculture minister’s proposals on crop prices by quoting the detailed notes he had made on a file 20 years ago.

SISTER’S WORDS CAME TRUE

As a first-time Rajya Sabha MP in 1969-70, Pranabda lived in a South Avenue flat overlooking the Rashtrapati Bhavan stables. One day, he remarked to his elder sister, Annapurna Devi, that the sight of well-fed horses made him wish he would be reborn among them. Pat came her reply: “Mark my words, you’ll be President one day.” Her words took more than 40 years to come true, simply because Pranabda was indispensable in the Congress party. He had been keen on the post in 2007, but Congress president Sonia Gandhi summoned him one night and said, “Just tell me who can replace you in the Cabinet and perform your role? Give me a name and you will be our candidate.” At which, both broke out laughing.

Singhvi’s recollections

Abhishek Singhvi , September 1, 2020: The Times of India

He walked 7-8km and wrote his diary even on the day he fell sick

By Abhishek Singhvi !

Few could match his iron discipline, from his morning constitutional to his latenight diary entries, that the very day he suffered the brain injury late at night, he had completed his 7 or 8 km walk (split into morning and evening segments) and written his treasured diary before retiring — early by his standards — at 11 pm.

The real USP of Pranabda was his rock-like solidity. He had humongous and unmatched experience, a middle-ofthe-road approach on economic issues, which leveraged the virtues of a historically licensed and currently liberalising economy with the benefits of a free market approach, without becoming starry eyed or being swayed by either.

His elephantine memory, a unique mix of political grip with technocratic expertise and an unprecedented mastery of procedures, rules, convention, practices and precedents, set him apart.

A left-of-centre centrist who was a master storyteller

On each of four vital criteria available for any individual’s evaluation, Pranabda scored highly and in different ways. His talent was legendary. There are few, if any, who possessed his in-depth knowledge and easy familiarity with the intricacies of policymaking on totally unrelated subjects. He was a man for all seasons and I cannot think of any occasion when he failed to deliver.

Secondly, his ideological commitment was clear and consistent: he was a slightly left-ofcentre centrist, with a balanced approach on social and economic issues, but consistent with the socialist context of a transforming and unequal economy like India and with the inclusive philosophy of the party he represented.

Thirdly, his temperament, criticised by some as short and hot, was fully understandable for a man heavily pressed for time, who had no time for small talk or idle political gossip. But catch him with time or in a relaxed mood (like a flight to Kolkata or elsewhere, as happened with me more than once), and you would be treated to a delightful experience of old-world charm, anecdotal treasures, deep and incisive analysis and a childlike simplicity. Finally, his commitment to his convictions was strong, honest and sincere: he was incapable of pretensions and came across as he was, without hypocrisy or camouflage.

In a 2012 article before Pranabda was even selected as the Presidential nominee by diverse parties, Inder Malhotra quoted an unnamed writer who described Pranabda as a “front person, reference point, troubleshooter, lightning rod, live wire, fulcrum, flywheel, and, indeed, the very heart and soul of the government”. Malhotra added: “This was a mind boggling... stupendous achievement for someone with most modest beginnings... who had to walk a few miles to the nearest school.” He was the go-to man for everything in UPA I and II and the number of EGOMs/GOMs he headed was testimony to this.

In our late-night meetings, he would tell me how Ajoy Mukherjee, a fine leader, expelled unfairly by Atulya Ghosh, formed the Bangla Congress, starting Pranabda’s political career in 1967. Bangla Congress sent him to Rajya Sabha, where, Indira Gandhi, impressed with his industry and analysis, started relying on him and appointed him commerce minister of India at the age of 42. After his exile (he named the persons responsible for it), Rajiv himself appointed him spokesperson. He would frequently tell me (whilst I would deny) that he had two failings because of which he could not aspire to be PM — his lack of fluency in Hindi and the fact that he was never elected to Lok Sabha (cured later for one term).

Singhvi is a Congress MP and eminent jurist

In A Select Club

Pranab Mukherjee is one of only three people (PMs holding portfolios excluded) who have held three or more different portfolios in the Cabinet Committee on Security, which is the key decision-making body of the Cabinet — in his case finance, defence and external affairs. Y B Chavan is the only one to have held four — finance, defence, home and external affairs — while R Venkataraman held the finance, defence and home portfolios at different points. Like Mukherjee, Venkataraman also went on to become President.

Family

Suvra Mukherjee 1940-2015

The Times of India, Aug 19 2015

Mohua Chatterjee

President's pillar of strength, she had faith in his mettle

Woman who inspired his 1st rebellion

Every night, no matter how busy he was or how late his day ended, when he got home, Pranab Mukherjee spent time with his ailing wife. This was the routine for the last six to seven years that she was unwell.

There was a wooden chair next to her bed, where Mukherjee sat, spoke to her, comforted and soothed her. This he did, even if he had more files to clear later.This was the moment Suvra Mukherjee waited for every day , her time with her husband of long years.

With no political aspira tion, Suvra had a charm and warmth that drew people to her. Her social skills won her many friends, which included a special relationship with Indira Gandhi. Even when she was PM, Indira would drop in for a fish-and-rice meal cooked by Suvra.

In her book on her relationship with Indira, Suvra mentions how the tallest Congress leader of her times would call her up to “convey things to her husband“.

Suvra, a Rabindrasangeet exponent and painter who wrote two books, knew where her strength lay .While channelizing her en thusiasm for cultural activities and starting the Gitanjali Troupe which travelled the country and abroad performing Tagore's dance dramas, she was the anchor of Mukherjee's family . She remained focused on bringing up their children -Abhijit, Indrajit and Sharmistha -and ensured that her husband's career never suffered because of pressing family matters. A constant source of encouragement, she was convinced he'd reach a high point. She passed on her cultural talent to her daughter, an accomplished Kathak dancer who has now joined the Congress.

Many found shelter in the Mukherjee home ever since the family moved to Delhi in 1969, invariably at the behest of the lady of the house.

Even as First Lady she often visited friends in CR Park. Her last years, mostly confined to her bed, were spent watching TV . She loved Uttam Kumar-Suchitra Sen films.

They married on July 13, 1957. Suvra's family came from Jessore, now in Bangladesh, and migrated to Kolkata when she was 10. They settled down in Howrah. Pranab met her when she was still a student of Howrah Girls' College. Attractive Suvra Ghosh was behind Pranab's first re bellion. He went against the wishes of his orthodox Brahmin family and married the girl from a different caste.

In the politics

Finance Minister

Sidhartha, September 1, 2020: The Times of India

Pranab had many hits as FM but also a few misses

Pranab Mukherjee will be remembered as one of the most distinguished allrounders to have been part of government in India. In his long career at the Centre, he handled everything from finance to commerce, defence and external affairs, and was also deputy chairman of the Planning Commission. He left his mark on historic events ranging from the Emergency to the nuclear deal.

Mukherjee entered Indira Gandhi’s council of ministers in 1973-74 as deputy minister handling industry, and later, shipping, transport and steel. In October 1974, he was moved to finance as junior minister in charge of revenue and expenditure, and oversaw the “fight against economic offences” during the Emergency. Over 4,000 income tax raids took place under his watch in 1974-75.

Finance seemed to be his favourite portfolio after he first took charge in 1982, and he went on to present seven Budgets and one interim budget over the next 30 years. He was the FM when Manmohan Singh was appointed Reserve Bank of India governor in 1982. In 2009, he secured the same portfolio when Singh was sworn in as PM for a second term. Moving to North Block months after the collapse on Wall Street, he helmed the economy through the global crisis. Sometimes, he seemed out of step, though. In 1984, for instance, he opposed the nationalisation of Union Carbide after the Bhopal gas leak on the grounds that it would deter foreign investment, but in 2012 he drew the charge of tax terrorism by retrospectively amending the law to levy capital tax on Vodafone after the government lost its case in the Supreme Court. His insistence on continuing with an economic stimulus resulted in double-digit inflation and steep depreciation of the rupee that added to the NPA crisis. He was also accused of undermining RBI’s authority, a charge that he denied in his memoirs. But he will be remembered for his role in several decisions that have shaped India, such as setting up the Exim Bank, Nabard and regional rural banks, and a formula to share resources with the states. In the UPA years, he headed 95 ministerial panels at some point or the other, dealing with issues ranging from telecom spectrum to special economic zones. As defence minister in 2004, he was part of efforts to work out the India-US defence framework and subsequently the nuclear deal.

As the President of India

Workaholic Prez Gifts People Museum, Library, Heritage|Jul 24 2017 : The Times of India (Delhi)

From the word go, President Pranab Mukherjee got down to making his presidency matter -part of his rich legacy is documenting Rashtrapati Bhavan and restoring several of its parts that were in disrepair. A look at the lasting changes he leaves behind in the presidential Estate.

Pranab Mukherjee as the President of India
From The Times of India

With PM Modi

September 1, 2020: The Times of India

A TOUCHING MOMENT- Modi visits Mukherjee at the former President’s residence after BJP’s 2019 general election win
From: September 1, 2020: The Times of India

Not partisan, he was Modi’s Delhi guide after 2014 debut

When Narendra Modi called on Pranab Mukherjee in May 2019, two days before he was to start his second term as Prime Minister, he was in for a pleasant surprise. The former President, who was waiting for his visitor, clasped Modi’s hand and profusely complimented him on winning his second Lok Sabha majority. “What you have achieved is unprecedented,” those privy to the warm conversation quoted Mukherjee as saying.

Known for his legendary memory, Mukherjee delved into the history of elections to say Modi’s back-to-back wins were unique in that he had pulled them off without the advantage of a platform long-synonymous with the freedom movement or a hallowed pedigree. Living up to his reputation as someone who had the facts at his fingertips, Mukherjee said BJP’s gains under Modi in 2019 were bigger than what Congress had clocked under Jawaharlal Nehru in 1957.

The meeting, in which Mukherjee offered sweets to Modi, was emblematic of the bond the two forged after 2014. The Prime Minister publicly acknowledged benefitting from the guidance he got from Mukherjee, saying the experienced campaigner had led him by the hand to negotiate Delhi’s ways.

Modi acknowledged the debt publicly soon after the meeting in 2019, tweeting: “Meeting Pranabda is always an enriching experience. His knowledge and insights are unparalleled. He is a statesman who has made an indelible contribution to our nation. Sought his blessings during our meeting today.”

The regard found expression in the Bharat Ratna the BJP government conferred on Mukherjee: a gesture which surprised the leader’s Congress colleagues still trying to come to terms with the electoral humiliation of May.

Yet, Mukherjee did not display his fondness for Modi on his sleeve. As President and even after, his views were sometimes seen as critical of the government.

But the two men clearly enjoyed a rapport and some Congress leaders found him indulgent of the Modi government on issues such as repromulgation of the ordinance on land acquisition or agreeing to the launch of goods and services tax at a special sitting in Parliament’s Central Hall.

Mukherjee remained unfazed. “Thank you for your kind words & gesture PM Shri Narendra Modi. It was indeed a pleasure meeting you. As you proceed, stronger into the second innings, my good wishes are with you in achieving your vision of ‘Sabka saath, sabka vikas aur sabka vishwas’,” he tweeted.

Meeting Bal Thackeray/ 2012

October 16, 2017: The Times of India


HIGHLIGHTS

NCP leader Sharad Pawar had insisted that Mukherjee meet Thackeray.

Mukherjee said the meeting was aimed at keeping coalition partners like the NCP in good humour with TMC.

He recalls that his visit to Mumbai was significant as Sena had extended support to Mukherjee's candidature.


Congress president Sonia Gandhi was upset with Pranab Mukherjee when he met late Shiv Sena leader Bal Thackeray despite being advised against it, the third volume of his autobiography has revealed.

On the campaign trail before the 2012 Presidential election, Mukherjee was visiting Maharashtra where Thackeray, who unilaterally extended support to his candidature, had made "elaborate arrangements" for his visit to Matoshree, the Thackeray residence in Mumbai.

Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) leader Sharad Pawar, a coalition partner of the United Progressive Alliance (UPA-II) government, had insisted that Mukherjee meet Thackeray.

Mukherjee, in the third volume of his autobiography, "Coalition Years: 1996-2012", justifies his meeting with Thackeray and shows how it was aimed at keeping coalition partners like the NCP in good humour with Trinamool Congress (TMC) leader Mamata Banerjee having already abandoned the UPA.

He recalls that his visit to Mumbai on July 13, 2012, was significant as Thackeray, whose party was part of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led National Democratic Alliance (NDA), had, without being asked to, extended support to Mukherjee's candidature, which was completely unexpected.

"I had asked both Sonia Gandhi and Sharad Pawar — who was instrumental, I think, in influencing Thackeray towards me — whether I should meet Thackeray during my visit to Mumbai. I had received several messages from him for an interaction at his residence. Sonia Gandhi was not enthusiastic about my meeting Bal Thackeray and (wanted to) avoid it, if possible. Sonia Gandhi's reservations about Thackeray were based on her own perception of his policies," says Mukherjee.

He says that, expectedly, Sharad Pawar's advice was completely different. He insisted that Mukherjee meet Thackeray since he and his followers were waiting to receive the presidential candidate at his residence and had made elaborate arrangements for his visit.

"Pawar added that Thackeray would consider it a personal insult if I did not meet him during my visit to Mumbai. I took a decision to meet Thackeray despite Sonia Gandhi's disapproval because I felt that the man who had broken away from his traditional coalition partner to support my candidature should not feel humiliated. I requested Sharad Pawar to take me to Thackeray's residence from the airport, and he readily agreed to do so," Mukherjee writes.

He describes his meeting with Thackeray as "very cordial" during which the Shiv Sena supremo jokingly said that it was but natural for the Maratha tiger to support the Royal Bengal tiger. "I had known Thackeray as a politician with a sectarian approach, but at the same time I could not ignore the fact that the man had gone out of the way to support my candidature," the former President says, adding that the Sena support to his predecessor Pratibha Patil in 2007 could still be explained because she was from Maharashtra.

"In my case, it was his deliberate decision to support me — he even told me that he found me distinctly different from other Congress politicians. Whatever be the reason, I thought it was my duty to thank him personally for his support.

But when he returned to Delhi, he recalls, the following morning Girija Vyas called on him and informed him that Sonia Gandhi and her political secretary, Ahmed Patel, were upset about his meeting with Thackeray.

"I understood the cause of their unhappiness but, as I have explained, I did what I believed was right. I had to keep in mind the sensitivity of advice of Sharad Pawar — an important ally of UPA-II. Already Mamata Banerjee-led TMC had opted out of UPA and presidential elections. If Sharad Pawar became similarly disenchanted, it wouldn't augur well for the UPA. The UPA had two more years in office as the ruling coalition; without the effective intervention and support of its partners it would not be possible for it to complete the term," he says.

He also recalls that Pawar was already unhappy over various issues and the relationship amongst coalition partners was under stress.

"I did not want to give him further cause for unhappiness. However, I decided not to raise this issue either with Sonia Gandhi or Ahmed Patel, and left the matter at the stage," he says.

Similarly, he recalls that Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar, who was then an ally of the BJP, had promised support to Mukherjee and had asked him not to visit Bihar.

"He said it would be embarrassing for him if he received me at the airport and organised meetings with his MLAs since his alliance partner — the BJP — would not take it kindly. He told me that since he had openly declared his support for my candidature, and Sharad Yadav had, on behalf of his party, signed my nomination papers, there was no need for my visiting Patna," he says.

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox
Translate