Former Prez Abdul Kalam was ready to swear Sonia in 2004
New Delhi: APJ Abdul Kalam was ready to swear Sonia Gandhi as the Prime Minister after the 2004 polls when he was the President despite pressure from various political leaders before Manmohan Singh was nominated to head the UPA government.
Kalam’s stand on the political situation after the Lok Sabha elections lifted the veil on an episode that has been intensly speculated upon that he was reluctant to appoint the Italian-born Gandhi as the country’s Prime Minister.
In a forthright account of his five-year tenure as President in a book titled “Turning Points”, Kalam recalls that had Gandhi staked a claim that he would have appointed her as it was the only “Constitutionally tenable” option available to him.
The former President says he was almost certain that Gandhi would head the UPA government but Rashtrapati Bhavan had to rework the appointment letter after the Congress chief nominated Singh as the Prime Minister.
“During this time there were many political leaders who came to meet me to request me not to succumb to any pressure and appoint Mrs Gandhi as the prime minister, a request that would not have been Constitutionally tenable.”
In his book, Kalam writes that after the Lok Sabha poll results were announced, no party or coalition came forward to form the government for three days.
“I had applied my mind totally in an unbiased manner after eliciting opinions from legal and constitutional experts. The primary aim of all the decisions was to protect and nurture the sanctity and robustness of our Constitution.”
Describing the 2004 elections as an interesting event, he writes, “It was a cause of concern for me and I asked my secretaries and rushed a letter to the leader of the largest party – in this case the Congress – to come forward and stake the claim for forming the government. “I was told that Sonia Gandhi was meeting me at 12.15 in the afternoon of 18 May.
She came in time but instead of coming alone she came with Dr Manmohan Singh and had a discussion with me.
While this communication was in progress, Kalam received a number of emails and letters from individuals, organizations and parties that he should not allow Gandhi to become the prime minister. And on May 19 at the allotted time, 8.15 p.m., Gandhi came to Rashtrapati Bhavan along with Singh.
The Rashtrapati Bhavan is ready for the swearing-in ceremony. That is when she told me that she would like to nominate Dr Manmohan Singh, who was the architect of economic reforms in 1991 and a trusted lieutenant of the Congress party with an impeccable image, as the prime minister.
“This was definitely a surprise to me and the Rashtrapati Bhavan Secretariat had to rework the letter appointing Dr Manmohan Singh as the Prime Minister and inviting him to form the government at the earliest,” Kalam writes in the book published by HarperCollins India and scheduled to be released next week.
After the swearing-in ceremony on May 22 involving Singh and 67 ministers, Kalam “breathed a sigh of relief that this important task had finally been done”