Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi, 79, will be the chief ministerial candidate for the Congress in the coming Assembly elections. His has been no mean achievement: He took the Congress to victory for the third consecutive time in 2011 and became the chief minister, winning 78 of the 126 seats in the Vidhan Sabha, surprising everyone.
Ahead of the general elections, he said if the Congress got less than seven out of 14 Lok Sabha seats in 2014, he would quit. His detractors, including Himanta Biswa Sarma, reminded the party high command of this - but were the ones to leave the party. The Congress got three seats.
This is why the announcement is so mysterious. It flies in the face of everything the party has been saying - promote younger people, new thinking, and discourage dynasties.
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In 2010, Gogoi faced serious health problems. He had to undergo complicated cardiac surgery and chatter started about a replacement for him. Now, the announcement that he will be the chief minister if the Congress comes to power in Assam again suggests no replacement is required.
Maybe one reason is Gogoi combines administrative and financial acumen that is rare. In 2001, when he took charge as chief minister, the outgoing AGP government had left the state's finances in a mess. Militant groups in a neighbouring state were claiming Assam was actually part of Greater Nagaland. Incessant migration from Bangladesh had prompted then governor, Lt General S K Sinha, to warn President K R Narayanan in a report that 57 of Assam's 126 Assembly constituencies had shown more than a 20 per cent increase in the number of voters between 1994 and 1997 whereas the all-India average was only 7.4 per cent, and that the Muslim population in Assam had shown a rise of 77.42 per cent over what it had been in 1971 (there was no census in Assam in 1981).
In 2006, Gogoi became the CM again largely by dint of putting the finances of the state in order and taking control of law and order. In 2011, he managed to increase the Congress tally.
His greatest challenge in the upcoming Assembly election in Assam is how to de-fang Biswa Sarma and the Bharatiya Janata Party; and how to handle the All India United Democratic Front czar, Badruddin Ajmal. Gogoi detests Ajmal's politics of ghettoisation of the minorities - but is finding it more and more difficult to counter it.
The good thing about Gogoi is, he leaves bureaucrats alone, does not expect them to swear personal commitment to him and is receptive to new ideas in finance and administration.
But, however, agile he might be, it goes without saying that age is catching up. It might have been better if instead of putting its eggs in the basket of the ageing warhorse, the Congress had promoted new leadership in consultation with him.