There may be doubts about Rahul  Gandhi’s  leadership qualities but the  Congress should not  keep all its eggs in the Sonia basket.  Here is why. It will be foolish for those seeking status quo to visualise short-term gains, like adding a dozen or so seats to its current Lok Sabha tally, in 2019.  The party should focus on 2024 by when Modi government is expected to face voter fatigue.

The  1928-born Motilal Vohra, the All India Congress Committee's affable treasurer, is the oldest functioning Congressmen. Veteran leader and former union minister Karan singh is  84, former  Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is 83, so is Rajya Sabha MP  Mohsina Kidwai.  Himachal Pradesh chief minister Virbadhra Singh  is 81  and  former union minister and  governor Shivraj Patil  80.

HR Bharadwaj, former law minister and  governor  is 78, so is Vylar Ravi, Rajya Sabha member of Parliament. Former Delhi chief minister Sheila Dikshit is just behind at  77.  Former Punjab chief minister Amarinder Singh is 73. The latter two have recently jointed a pro-Sonia chorus, heralding for the first time, a proxy factional war in the Gandhi family, pitting the mother against son.

Half a dozen party veterans are octogenarians, a dozen are septuagenarians  and about two dozen  sexagenarians  and the remaining  fall into the category of old aged persons, that is between the age of 50 and 60.  To cut a long story short, by 2024, when the Congress hopes to  make a  comeback,  the 130-year-old party will literally become a  geriatric ward in a country predominantly populated by the 18-35 year-olds.

Sonia Gandhi, the Congress party's supreme leader, now  69,  will be 78 by the time Lok Sabha polls are held in 2024.  Other worthies like Ahmed Patel, Kamal Nath, Prithviraj Chavan, Ajit Yogi, KV Thomas,  PC Chacko, all pushing 70 now, will be nearing 80 in 2024.  Seniors  such as Janardan Dwivedi,  Vylar Ravi, Oscar Fernandes, Veerappa Moily,  Madhusudan Mistry, Mani Shankar Aiyar and Amarinder Singh will cross the age of 80 by then.

No quick-fix solutions

The old guard have reasons to be piqued and disappointed with heir apparent Rahul’s  dismal track record  but they should rethink  their strategy of delaying his coronation, given the severe leadership crisis in the AICC which has no quick-fix solutions.

The party has come to such a pass because it paid no attention to creating  a talent pool of young leaders.  Ambika Soni , 73,  Ghulam Nabi Azad, 75,  Anand Sharma , 62,  Kamal Nath, 69,  are among the last batch of  leaders  groomed by the late Sanjay Gandhi.

While many greying leaders were packed off to Raj Bhavans, several  seniors met with untimely death.  Against the depletion of leadership, there was no corresponding accretion. Late Rajiv Gandhi , PV Narasimha Rao and incumbent president Sonia did not bother about building leadership.

As far back as in 2003, at the Shimla AICC conclave, Sonia had announced the setting up of a Congress Training Academy to prepare future leaders. Six years ago, Rahul talked about converting the Jawaharlal Nehru Leadership Initiative into a university to groom Gen Next leaders. He flagged the issue again at the Jaipur brainstorming session in 2013, but nothing tangible has been done. The Youth Congress is yet to produce a single leader of state or national standing.

To buffer the shrinking  leadership base, Rahul imported a number of outsiders  into the AICC, but their induction only widened the chasm  between him and entrenched mandarins. It is futile to blame him alone for the 2014 fiasco.  It was a collective failure involving the top brass comprising  Rahul,  Sonia, Manmohan Singh and their top aides. Pro-Rahul elements insist that he had no greater say in the government or given full control of the organisation and hence it is unfair to single him out.

But Rahul’s conduct so far has not been inspiring and in the absence of a vibrant leader, it is natural  for the old guards to press the panic button, seeking continuation and Sonia to remain president.

Some of the protestation, however,  is not that innocent.  Sheila Dikshit and Amarinder Singh are among  top leaders, who recently  went public plugging for Sonia’s continuance at the helm. It is an open secret in the party that Dikshit had long spells of turf  war with Ajay Maken, who had his eyes on her chair.  Much to her chagrin,  Maken, a Rahul loyalist, was  recently appointed  Delhi Pradesh Congress Committee chief.  Another Rahul nominee, Pratap Singh  Bajwa, a bête noire of Amarinder Singh,  was made Punjab Congress president. Many satraps are also miffed with Rahul for facilitating appointment of young PCC chiefs in their respective states. It is also true that old guards fear that they will lose their clout in a post -Sonia  dispensation.

Vis-a-vis Rahul,  Sonia is a better organiser, communicator and  crowd puller and can mobilise the Opposition.  But these  virtues alone will not fetch votes. And by 2024, when the real fight begins, she will be just two years short of being 80.

As of now, the only positive thing going for Rahul is his age and clean image. If and when Rahul is anointed Congress chief, he will inherit a weak and ageing party apparatus. It will be a tough task for him to build a new, young team which may take a decade or so. The party does not have too many options. It has to either swim or sink with him.