Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
India

'Narendra Modi Set To Become India's Third Most Successful PM After Jawaharlal Nehru And Indira Gand

Darpan News Desk IANS, 30 Mar, 2017 12:41 PM
    Narendra Modi is set to become the "third most successful" Prime Minister of India after Jawaharlal Nehru and Indira Gandhi, renowned historian Ramachandra Guha has said, asserting that the 66-year-old leader's "charisma" and "appeal" transcend the boundaries of caste and language.
     
    Speaking at the ongoing London School of Economics (LSE) India Summit 2017 in New Delhi, 58-year-old Ramachandra Guha said Prime Minister Modi's "authority" and "Pan-Indian vision" put him on the same pedestal as that of Jawaharlal Nehru and his daughter Indira Gandhi.
     
    "We live in a time when Narendra Modi is poised to become, and perhaps already is, the third most successful Prime Minister in Indian history. He is the only one you would place on par with (Jawaharlal) Nehru and Indira (Gandhi) in terms of authority that he exudes and the Pan-Indian vision he commands," Mr Guha said yesterday.
     
    "Since (Jawaharlal) Nehru and Indira (Gandhi) there has been no Indian Prime Minister who has had that authority, that sense of command, that charisma, that cross-caste, cross-linguistic, cross-regional appeal in India," he said.
     
     
    Deliberating on Indian political history, Mr Guha noted that caste system and discrimination against women were two of its "indisputable facts". He alleged that both Islam and Hinduism, the two major religions of the sub continent, "grievously" discriminate against women. "Caste system is the most rigorous, most diabolical system of social stratification ever invented by humans and we Hindus invented it," he said.
     
    "The second indisputable fact is that Islam and Hinduism in their scripture and their social practice grievously discriminate against women," Mr Guha said at the 3-day summit which began yesterday and is organised to commemorate 70 years of India's independence.
     
    Mr Guha, who was Philippe Roman Professor of History and International Affairs at LSE IDEAS in 2011-12, also spoke on LSE's long and rich historical relationship with India. He said the prestigious institution has had more "substantive" and "enduring" impact on the intellectual, social and political history of the 20th century than Oxford and Cambridge. "If you look at Sociology, Philosophy, Anthropology and Public Policy, LSE has had a definitive and formative impact. It has had a great influence on the world and a major influence on India," he said.
     
     
    Mr Guha said renowned political scientist Harold Laski, an LSE alumni, mentored many Indian social scientists and also influenced Jawaharlal Nehru.
     
    Recounting some of its illustrious alumni such as BR Ambedkar, Krishna Menon, Tarlok Singh among others, Mr Guha said the premier institution possessed an international and democratic spirit which went hand in hand.
     
    Picking Mr Singh as one of his favourites, he said the noted Civil Servant set the foundation of India's Green Revolution and saved the country from becoming a client state of America.
     
    "At the level of civil society, deepening of democracy and egalitarian ethos as well as working for women and peasants, there is an invisible impact of LSE on India," he observed.
     
    Michael Cox, professor Emeritus of International Relations and Co-Director of LSE IDEAS, in his speech said the London-based institution has had more influence abroad than at home.
     
    "Oxford did to Britain, what LSE did to the world," Mr Cox said.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    15-Year-Old Boy Commits Suicide In Delhi

    A 15-year-old boy hanged himself from a ceiling fan in Dwarka area of south west Delhi, after his father rebuked him for getting into a fight with some local boys, police said on Friday.

    15-Year-Old Boy Commits Suicide In Delhi

    Drugs, Despair, Decline Fuel Demand For Change In Punjab

    Drugs, Despair, Decline Fuel Demand For Change In Punjab
    Kuch na hona Punjab da, zameen banjar, aulad kanjar. (Nothing can come of Punjab -- lands barren, children jobless.)

    Drugs, Despair, Decline Fuel Demand For Change In Punjab

    Punjab Polls: Candidates At Doorsteps To Woo Voters Amid Tight Security

    Punjab Polls: Candidates At Doorsteps To Woo Voters Amid Tight Security
    With only a couple of hours left for the February 4 Punjab assembly elections to get unerway, leaders and workers of various political parties on Friday moved from door to door in a last-ditch effort to woo voters amid tight security in the border state.

    Punjab Polls: Candidates At Doorsteps To Woo Voters Amid Tight Security

    Over 100,000 Security Personnel Deployed For Punjab Polls

    Over 100,000 Security Personnel Deployed For Punjab Polls
    Over one lakh security personnel, including central paramilitary forces, will be on high alert as Punjab voters on Saturday exercise their franchise in 117 assembly segments as well as the by-election for the Amritsar Lok Sabha seat.

    Over 100,000 Security Personnel Deployed For Punjab Polls

    Punjab Elections 2017: AAP To Deploy 15,000 Volunteers With Spy Cameras

    Punjab Elections 2017: AAP To Deploy 15,000 Volunteers With Spy Cameras
    Aap Aadmi Party (AAP), which is eyeing to wrest power in Punjab, will deploy 15,000 volunteers equipped with spy cameras outside the polling stations in the state tomorrow to keep a "close watch on distribution of liquor or cash to lure voters".

    Punjab Elections 2017: AAP To Deploy 15,000 Volunteers With Spy Cameras

    Former CBI Director Joginder Singh Passes Away After Prolonged Illness

    Former CBI Director Joginder Singh Passes Away After Prolonged Illness
    An IPS officer, Singh was the CBI director between 1996-97.

    Former CBI Director Joginder Singh Passes Away After Prolonged Illness