04-17-2009, 10:46 PM
Didn't I post this somewhere. Ought to have. Sorry if it's double. Came across this a week or so back.
Soppy soap drama.
long ExpressBuzz link
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>I always wanted Rahul Gandhi to be minister: PM </b>
IANS First Published : 26 Mar 2009 08:53:00 PM IST
Last Updated : 26 Mar 2009 09:48:26 PM IST
NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh Thursday disclosed that he wanted Congress general secretary Rahul Gandhi, the son of Congress president Sonia Gandhi, to be a minister in the cabinet, but Rahul refused.
"I always wanted Rahul Gandhi to be a minister, but he refused," Manmohan Singh told reporters on the sidelines of a defence investiture function at Rashtrapati Bhavan.
(Not literally nepotism perhaps, but if sycophancy and bending over backwards can make one family, MMS must have been elevated to the Sonia family patriarch by now. And that *makes* it nepotism.)
"Power must be handed to the youth," the prime minister underlined.
Manmohan Singh's remarks come amid speculation about a role for Rahul Gandhi in the next government if the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) led by the Congress returns to power after the elections this April-May.
Repudiating the opposition's charge about the Congress' inability to handle coalitions, Manmohan Singh said the party had run the UPA coalition successfully for the last five years and had proved its ability to change with the times.
In a candid appraisal of his government's performance, the prime minister said he will give the UPA "seven out of 10".
Asked about allies like PMK leaving the UPA and other parties like Samajawadi Party, Lok Janshakti Party (LJP) and Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) forging an alliance in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, the prime minister said this was a result of local politics and not a reflection on the Congress' skills at managing coalitions.
Alluding to a slew of flagship development programmes of the UPA like National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (NREGS) and Bharat Nirman, the prime minister said that his government had achieved 80-85 percent of what it had set out to do and that these programmes were changing the face of India.
The prime minister's comments on Rahul Gandhi come three days after Congress president Sonia Gandhi endorsed Manmohan Singh's name as the prime ministerial candidate of the Congress and a day after Rahul Gandhi enthusiastically supported him, saying he had achieved a "hell of a lot" and had both toughness and grit.
(What? "Toughness and grit"? MMS basically told islamoterrorists the country was theirs for the taking. Same thing that SAntonia told the christofascists.)
Lauding Manmohan Singh as a "first class gentleman", Rahul Gandhi had said he considered the prime minister to be "one of the top leaders" of the country.
(What an excessively emotional story. Look how it's topped off with <i>mutual admiration and congratulations</i>.)<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Best of all is the photo. With Raoul imitating Dopey (actually, the doting Madmoron also looks a bit high), I will be certain to cast Raoul as the lead junkie if I make a relevant movie on why kids should Say No To Drugs. Cretinous drugs are particularly harmful: one whiff catching you unawares and you go zombie.
Soppy soap drama.
long ExpressBuzz link
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin--><b>I always wanted Rahul Gandhi to be minister: PM </b>
IANS First Published : 26 Mar 2009 08:53:00 PM IST
Last Updated : 26 Mar 2009 09:48:26 PM IST
NEW DELHI: Prime Minister Manmohan Singh Thursday disclosed that he wanted Congress general secretary Rahul Gandhi, the son of Congress president Sonia Gandhi, to be a minister in the cabinet, but Rahul refused.
"I always wanted Rahul Gandhi to be a minister, but he refused," Manmohan Singh told reporters on the sidelines of a defence investiture function at Rashtrapati Bhavan.
(Not literally nepotism perhaps, but if sycophancy and bending over backwards can make one family, MMS must have been elevated to the Sonia family patriarch by now. And that *makes* it nepotism.)
"Power must be handed to the youth," the prime minister underlined.
Manmohan Singh's remarks come amid speculation about a role for Rahul Gandhi in the next government if the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) led by the Congress returns to power after the elections this April-May.
Repudiating the opposition's charge about the Congress' inability to handle coalitions, Manmohan Singh said the party had run the UPA coalition successfully for the last five years and had proved its ability to change with the times.
In a candid appraisal of his government's performance, the prime minister said he will give the UPA "seven out of 10".
Asked about allies like PMK leaving the UPA and other parties like Samajawadi Party, Lok Janshakti Party (LJP) and Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) forging an alliance in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, the prime minister said this was a result of local politics and not a reflection on the Congress' skills at managing coalitions.
Alluding to a slew of flagship development programmes of the UPA like National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (NREGS) and Bharat Nirman, the prime minister said that his government had achieved 80-85 percent of what it had set out to do and that these programmes were changing the face of India.
The prime minister's comments on Rahul Gandhi come three days after Congress president Sonia Gandhi endorsed Manmohan Singh's name as the prime ministerial candidate of the Congress and a day after Rahul Gandhi enthusiastically supported him, saying he had achieved a "hell of a lot" and had both toughness and grit.
(What? "Toughness and grit"? MMS basically told islamoterrorists the country was theirs for the taking. Same thing that SAntonia told the christofascists.)
Lauding Manmohan Singh as a "first class gentleman", Rahul Gandhi had said he considered the prime minister to be "one of the top leaders" of the country.
(What an excessively emotional story. Look how it's topped off with <i>mutual admiration and congratulations</i>.)<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Best of all is the photo. With Raoul imitating Dopey (actually, the doting Madmoron also looks a bit high), I will be certain to cast Raoul as the lead junkie if I make a relevant movie on why kids should Say No To Drugs. Cretinous drugs are particularly harmful: one whiff catching you unawares and you go zombie.