Piyush Goyal, Union Commerce and Industry Minister, has masterfully woven a historical tapestry of Congress’s ‘compromise’ politics, pinning Rahul Gandhi as its latest torchbearer. On X, he condemned Gandhi’s ploy of deploying shirtless attendees at a global AI summit as a slur on India’s stature.
Nehru’s legacy kicked off the thread: declining UNSC permanence in the 1950s for China’s sake, affirming Tibet’s Chinese status in 1954, and brushing off 1962 war warnings—classified intel persists.
Indira’s compromises included foreign cash flows, Katchatheevu surrender, security shortcuts. Rajiv navigated Bofors graft, with payoffs and erased trails; Anderson bolted after Bhopal via lax oversight, foreign fixers pulling defense strings intimately.
Sonia’s UPA era hid authority in unofficial realms. National Herald funneled Congress wealth to kin-controlled firms. Donor networks from China to Soros bred unease.
Goyal’s clincher: ‘Rahul’s distortions pale against Congress’s chronicle; public memory holds Nehru-Indira-Sonia’s national concessions firm.’ Goyal’s chronicle not only critiques but reframes Congress’s narrative, bolstering BJP’s governance pitch.
