[<<There’s another candidate in an awkwardly similar situation: Raghul
(with a “g”) Gandhi, a 30-year-old consultant from Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu,
who is one of the 22 hopefuls – including the more famous Rahul (no “g”)
–seeking the Lok Sabha seat of Wayanad, in Kerala. Raghul is running as the
Agila India Makkan Kazagham party candidate, with the support of the
Hindustan Janata Party.

In fact, four of the 22 candidates of the seat are named Gandhi, though
it’s unlikely they are related: Aside from Rahul, 48, of the Congress party
(symbol: hand) and Raghul (symbol: bucket), there are Rahul Gandhi KE
(symbol: hour glass), a social worker from Kottayam, a district in southern
Kerala, who ran as an independent, and KM Sivaprasad Gandhi (symbol: air
conditioner), a research scholar from Thrissur, also a southern Kerala
district, who was running for the Indian Gandhian party.

Wayanad went to the polls on Tuesday.>>

That's micro-management of poll, at the constituency level.
Only a few are great at it.

(Pls. visit the original site, for the facsimiles.)]

https://scroll.in/article/921027/in-wayanad-rahul-gandhi-is-up-against-raghul-gandhi-and-rahul-gandhi-ke?fbclid=IwAR0JJWrnXWxOzmYC1MfIFNrknd3s5GN1HNL2e0nDiuQj_us_rItfSTwB6Vg

In Wayanad, Rahul Gandhi was up against Raghul Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi KE
Four of the 22 candidates in the constituency are named Gandhi.

In Wayanad, Rahul Gandhi was up against Raghul Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi KE
(From left) Congress President Rahul Gandhi and Agila India Makkan Kazagham
candidate Raghul Gandhi.

5 hours ago

Annalisa Merelli, qz.com

Rahul Gandhi – son, grandson, and great-grandson of Indian prime ministers
– is campaigning to become prime minister himself. His name elicits strong
reactions and offers instant brand recognition. It also alienates voters
who do not appreciate dynastic rule within a democracy.

There’s another candidate in an awkwardly similar situation: Raghul (with a
“g”) Gandhi, a 30-year-old consultant from Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, who is
one of the 22 hopefuls – including the more famous Rahul (no “g”) –seeking
the Lok Sabha seat of Wayanad, in Kerala. Raghul is running as the Agila
India Makkan Kazagham party candidate, with the support of the Hindustan
Janata Party.

In fact, four of the 22 candidates of the seat are named Gandhi, though
it’s unlikely they are related: Aside from Rahul, 48, of the Congress party
(symbol: hand) and Raghul (symbol: bucket), there are Rahul Gandhi KE
(symbol: hour glass), a social worker from Kottayam, a district in southern
Kerala, who ran as an independent, and KM Sivaprasad Gandhi (symbol: air
conditioner), a research scholar from Thrissur, also a southern Kerala
district, who was running for the Indian Gandhian party.

Wayanad went to the polls on Tuesday.

Credit: Form provided by the Election Commission of India

Singing up people with similar votes to a prominent candidate in the hope
of confusing voters is an old practice in India, so common that the
Election Commission of India introduced a new rule, requiring the
photograph of the candidate to be affixed together with their name and
symbol. Although confusion may not be the motive with some of the Gandhi
candidates in Wayanad.

Like the more famous Rahul, Raghul Gandhi filed his affidavit on April 4,
but it was notarised on April 1, while Rahul’s was notarised on April 2; KM
Sivaprasad Gandhi filed his affidavit on April 1, ahead all other
namesakes, while Rahul Gandhi KE only filed on April 12.

What’s in a name
A list of the Wayanad candidates alongside their photo and symbol.
A list of the Wayanad candidates alongside their photo and symbol.
All of the candidates owe their names to politics, one way or the other.
Rahul Gandhi KE says he was named by his father out of respect for the
Congress party, and KM Sivaprasad Gandhi only added “Gandhi” to his last
name after he joined the Gandhian party, in honour of Mahatma Gandhi. (To
add to the confusion, Rahul Gandhi is a descendant of Jawaharlal Nehru;
Indira Gandhi, Nehru’s daughter, changed her name after marrying Feroze
Gandhi, formerly Gandhy, who changed his last name’s last letter to an “i”
when he joined the independence struggle of the 1930s.)

Raghul Gandhi isn’t new to electoral races. He has run for office twice
already, in 2014 for mayor of Coimbatore, and in 2016 for the Tamil Nadu
assembly elections. He would have run from Coimbatore again, he told
Quartz, but his affidavit was rejected because of his name’s similarity to
Rahul Gandhi.

Rather than going through the bureaucracy of confirming his identity, he
decided to try Wayanad instead, where his entry didn’t raise suspicion –
ending up against Rahul Ji (as Rahul Gandhi is commonly referred to, Ji
being a respectful suffix in Hindi) himself. (As is traditional for his
family, and himself, Rahul Gandhi is running for a seat in Amethi, in Uttar
Pradesh. He is on the ballot in Wayanad, too: Candidates can run in two
constituencies; should they be elected in both, they have 10 days to recuse
themselves from one of the seats, which is then up for grabs through a
by-election.)

There is something Shakespearean to it: Raghul has come to run against the
man he owes his name to. His grandfather, A. Palanisamy, was a freedom
fighter and Congress supporter, and his late father, Krishnan P, campaigned
for Congress for 30 years. A fan of the Gandhi family, Krishnan named his
children after prominent figures in the party: Raghul has a sister, and her
name is Indira Priyadarshini.

‘A new kind of company’
“I hate politics, I got so many opportunities to join [politics] with my
father but I rejected them,” said Raghul. However, later he realised that
“the power is only yours when it is in your hands”. So now, Raghul, who has
a 10th-grade diploma, is a full-time politician. Though he is running with
the Agila India Makkan Kazagham for this election, with the support of the
Hindustan Janata Party, he intends to register his own party, Jaihind
Freedom Party, to eventually take on Rahul Gandhi and Narendra Modi at a
national level.

At the moment his platform has two main points: To fight for the adoption
of 33 state languages, particularly Dravidian languages, as national
languages, and to lower taxes. This is just a first step towards his
ultimate goal, which he says he will pursue once he gets a chance of bigger
exposure on national level: “Freedom from all taxes.”


His vision is radical: Raghul proposes to turn the government into “a new
kind of company” that runs all sorts of businesses – from cinemas to
restaurants – and invests the profits in funding public services and
programs instead of requiring taxes. This has the advantage, he says, of
guaranteeing income for the government, and providing jobs to the people
working for governmental businesses, who then can hold onto their whole
income.

Raghul Gandhi’s electoral program for Wayanad, Kerala. He knows it’s an
uphill battle, so for now he will be content to help reduce taxes, if
elected. For that, he says he plans to support whoever ends up forming the
national government. That’s the only way, he explains, to guarantee Wayanad
people are taken care of.

Like Rahul Gandhi, and the other candidate Gandhis, Raghul is not from
Wayanad, nor has he spent much time in the district. He visited for the
first time earlier this month to file his affidavit and distribute
pamphlets.

“Everyone was very supportive,” says Raghul, although as of April 20,
Quartz was not able to find a single voter in Sultan Bathery, Pulpally, or
Kalpetta (some of the main centres in Wayanad) who was aware of his
candidacy.

On April 21, Raghul embarked in a one-day push for his campaign, aiming to
drive through all of his constituency. “I want to reach seven places – the
main places,” he said, “all of Wayanad.”

The campaign is now officially over, with voting on April 23. But Raghul’s
fight isn’t: He shared with Quartz copy of a complaint he had filed to the
Election Commission of India, asking that Rahul Gandhi be disqualified from
running in the Wayanad due to his holding a British passport as well as an
Indian one – an issue the BJP candidate in the district had raised with the
commission, too.

Here is the full list of candidates seeking the Wayanad seat:

Meera Maria contributed to this report.

This article first appeared on Quartz.
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