Politics has always been a curious theatre where loyalty is applauded in speeches but often abandoned in practice. Few episodes illustrate this better than the recent conduct of Shashi Tharoor. He did not waste a moment before joining an opposition delegation invited by the ruling party to tell the world that India had emerged victorious in its confrontation with Pakistan. Nor did he hesitate before attending a dinner hosted for Vladimir Putin, even though Rahul Gandhi and the Congress president were pointedly not invited.
Each act, taken in isolation, can be defended with clever reasoning. Tharoor is, after all, a seasoned diplomat. He is articulate, globally recognised, and comfortable in international drawing rooms. But politics is not merely about individual brilliance. It is also about collective discipline, shared responsibility, and the unspoken understanding that when a party takes a stand, its senior leaders do not freelance.
The poor showing in the municipal elections in Thiruvananthapuram should be a moment for introspection. It should be a mirror reflecting something deep. Voters may forgive defeat. They are far less charitable about perceived disloyalty. They do not admire the clever manoeuvre as much as the consistent stand.
They do not reward those who appear to be forever auditioning for approval from the other side.
There is a difference between statesmanship and opportunism. When an opposition leader appears too eager to accept invitations selectively extended by those in power, questions will be asked. Not by television anchors alone, but by ordinary supporters.
For them, loyalty is not an abstract virtue. It is lived, visible, and sometimes costly.
Shashi Tharoor has always excelled at personality. His command of language, his polished manners, and his global presence are undeniable. But politics ultimately judges character, not charm. Character is revealed not in eloquent essays or witty speeches, but in moments when silence would have been wiser, or refusal would have carried weight.
If one believes the party is wrong, there are honourable ways to challenge it from within. If one believes one no longer belongs, there is also an honourable exit. What breeds discomfort is the posture of standing with one foot inside and one foot outside, applauding from both sides of the aisle.
Perhaps it is time for the Congress to stop pretending.
Give him a firm handshake, a polite farewell, and a clear shove to help him cross over.
This would at least restore honesty to the situation. It would spare supporters the embarrassment of explaining what no longer makes sense.
Politics may be ruthless, but clarity is a form of respect.
Being slick is sick. Speaking well here, is just being glib.
In the end, voters look past the vocabulary and listen for conviction. So, Shashi, do jump across and see for yourself if the grass is greener on the other side, or maybe, just maybe it’s the saffron you’re missing..!
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Robert Clements is a newspaper columnist and writes a daily column, which has graced the pages of over 60 newspapers and magazines, from a daily column in the Khaleej Times, Dubai, the Morning Star, London, and in nearly every state in India, from The Statesman in Kolkata, to the Kashmir Times in Kashmir to the Trinity Mirror in Chennai.
Hi Bob ,
Well written, so much of his personality was revealed in today’s write up …….
Thank you Sheela!
He had his day and his share of adulation based on whatever mask he chose to wear. Where there is smoke there is fire this idiom comes to mind, this is not only of the present state of affairs but it goes beyond to the unfortunate and unpleasant demise of Sunanda. Character assassination is a vile thing and to get out of it when you are innocent is hard but time can be a tough contender and sometimes things change.
Thank you Joseph!
The behaviour of Sashi Tharoor is disappointing. In the beginning of his political career, Congress gave him importance. If he had joined bjp in the beginning, he would have remained a nonentity. Now he is doing the groundwork to jump ship. Sorry state of affairs.
Yes Sam, you’re right. Thank you!
Rahul is another problem but not the problem in this matter. Shashi misjudged his steps, either he makes course correction now or political suicide is inevitable
True Sameer. Thank you