When
 Indira Gandhi was gunned down by her bodyguards on October 31, 1984, 
the instant elevation of her son Rajiv to the post of prime minister 
appeared to confirm her family's status as India's natural-born rulers.
But
 three decades on from the assassination of India's 'Iron Lady', even 
members of her Congress party are beginning to question whether they may
 now have to look beyond the Nehru-Gandhi clan for survival.
After
 a crushing defeat in May's general election, things hit a new low this 
month when Congress trailed in third place in two state polls with Rahul
 Gandhi -- the dynasty's latest scion -- having all but disappeared from
 view.
"Indira Gandhi was the real architect of the Congress 
party's expansion. She had the ability to directly speak to the masses 
across India and get votes," said Rasheed Kidwai, who has written 
several books on Congress."For the first time, instead of the party depending on the family, the family depends on it for its survival," he told AFP.
The centre-left Congress has ruled India for more than 50 of the 67 years since independence, while a member of the family has been at the helm of the party for all but a handful of those years.
Indira's father Jawaharlal Nehru was India's first prime minister from 1947 to 1964. Two years after his death, Indira became the premier from 1966 to 1977 and then again from 1980 before a grieving Rajiv then took up the mantle.
Such was the sympathy towards Rajiv that Congress recorded its best-ever showing in elections soon after he took office, reinforcing the notion that the family was destined to rule the world's largest democracy.
After Rajiv was assassinated in a Tamil suicide attack in 1991, Congress turned to his Italian-born widow Sonia who led the party back to power in a shock 2004 election victory.
She
 declined to become premier, installing the mild-mannered Manmohan Singh
 instead, but was seen as the power behind the throne until May's defeat
 after a lacklustre campaign led by her son Rahul.
- 'Defeated and directionless' -While few within Congress speak out against the family, analysts say there can be no illusions about the scale of its troubles.
"It is defeated and directionless with a serious leadership crisis," Zoya Hasan, a professor at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi, told AFP.
While Rajiv and Sonia were reluctant leaders, both showed an aptitude for politics that their daughter Priyanka seems to have inherited.
Although Priyanka is seen as an alternative leader, she says she is dedicated to raising her children and is hampered by controversy over her husband's property business dealings.
Rahul
 -- once described in a US diplomatic cable as "an empty suit" -- has 
shown no such appetite and likened power to "poison" before being 
persuaded to become Congress's election frontman. His mother remains 
party president.
Since May, Rahul has been barely seen in public and has left Sonia to rally the party.
Hasan
 said it had been a mistake to think the Gandhi magic could be handed 
down endlessly, adding: "I think the whole transition from Sonia Gandhi 
to Rahul Gandhi went horribly wrong."
For years, it seemed almost unthinkable that anyone but a Gandhi could lead Congress.
But
 asked recently if someone from outside the family could lead the party,
 former finance minister P. Chidambaram told NDTV: "I think so... some 
day, yes."
The party's plight
 has added to the nostalgia for Indira even though she was a massively 
divisive figure, especially after she imposed a 21-month state of 
emergency.
Critics say her 
authoritarian streak was again illustrated by her order to storm the 
Golden Temple, the Sikhs' most revered shrine, in June 1984 when part of
 the complex in Amritsar were taken over by militants.
After
 at least 400 people were killed in the assault, two of her Sikh 
bodyguards took revenge by shooting her dead in her garden.
"She
 was a very great leader, a world leader, who I saw was respected 
wherever she went," K. Natwar Singh, a former foreign minister who 
accompanied her on numerous trips, told AFP.
Singh, who fell out with Sonia after being sacked in 2005, sees little chance of any immediate Congress revival.
"Its fortunes are very, very low and have nowhere to go but up, but at this time I don't see it happening," he added.
Digvijaya
 Singh, another Congress veteran who worked with both Indira and Rajiv 
Gandhi, said it would be a mistake to write off the party but added it 
was struggling to get its message across.
"I
 am sure we will make a comeback... but one thing that I have been 
suggesting to Rahul Gandhi and to others in the party is the need to 
communicate more, and directly, in this age of 24/7 communication," he 
told AFP.




 
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