India Today

Where did UPA II lose steam in race to Parliament? Pranab Mukherjee answers

In his first interview since demitting the office of the President of India, Pranab Mukherjee speaks exclusively to India Today Group Editorial Director Raj Chengappa.

Q. Why do you think the Congress was defeated in 2014 and sunk to its lowest tally ever?

A. We managed the coalition of UPA I exceedingly well. Though overall our own strength was 147 and we had more parties as coalition parties parties from the Left, the socialists, the Samajwadi Party were supporting us from the outside that coalition was much more cohesive, it was running, it was functioning and we could deliver good governance. But in UPA II, the coalition did not do so.

Q. Why did things go so wrong in UPA II?

A. One reason for the Congress downfall was that it thought that the 200 seats it won were equal to 280 seats. So the flexibility of mind and flexibility to accept others' views was restricted. Secondly, in terms of the coalition, Mamata Banerjee departed in 2012. It was very difficult to handle her, no doubt, but at the same time we had to handle her because she had 19 Lok Sabha members, a big partner. I had fought with her, we had an open confrontation in the cabinet, she used to get very angry with me but nonetheless I could keep her in the coalition. I was elected President in July and she left the coalition in October. Also most of the major legislative initiatives, including bold decisions like the civil nuclear cooperation agreement, were taken during UPA I. But somehow or the other, in UPA II we appeared to have lost this steam to move ahead. We may have been tired or whatever may have been the reason, but that's why in 2014 we lost.

Q. Did you sense that the Congress party was going to lose in 2014?

A. When the election campaign was in full swing, Congress leaders who met me were mainly ministers, and except Sonia Gandhi and Manmohan Singh, gave their assessment which I used to note down. The Congressmen who

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from India Today

India Today6 min read
A Singham In Saffron
FORMER INDIAN POLICE SERVICE officer Kuppuswamy Annamalai is just four years into his avatar as a politician but is already looking like a pro. At Palladam, on the outskirts of Coimbatore, the Lok Sabha constituency he is contesting from, bursting cr
India Today6 min read
Battle Of The Guarantees
THE ELECTORAL LANDSCAPE IN KARNATAKA has been marked by a curious paradox since the turn of the century. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has been the biggest beneficiary of seats in parliamentary polls in the state since 2004, but has yet to win a s
India Today1 min read
Sultans Of Aasman
It’s harvest season for India’s charter flight operators, as eager candidates hop on to rented choppers and small aircraft with sky-high ambitions. Soaring along with them is the revenue graph of these private ‘non-schedule operators’ (NSOps)—India h

Related