New Delhi: It is a fairly safe assumption that B R Ambedkar would have "disapproved" of and been "quite critical" of the idea that political leadership should go through inheritance rather than election or other forms of merit, senior Congress leader Shashi Tharoor said on Thursday. Tharoor, who is pitted against party colleague Mallikarjun Kharge in the Congress presidential election, was speaking at the Nehru Memorial Museum and Library here on the launch of his new book "Ambedkar: A life".
For someone who was "never convinced by the logic of the caste system he would not have accepted the family inheritance principle anyway in politics or anywhere else", the Lok Sabha MP from Thiruvananthapuram said of Ambedkar. "...Though he (Ambedkar) has not written about it, I can tell you that it is a fairly safe assumption that he would have disapproved and would have been quite critical of the idea that political leadership should go through inheritance rather than through election or other forms of merit," said Tharoor, when asked about Ambedkar's views on state parties concentrating power in the hands of respective first families.
The book launch, moderated by the author himself, had former Supreme Court judge Justice (retired) Madan B Lokur, former Rajya Sabha MP Bhalchandra Mungekar and lawyer Karuna Nundy as the panelists talking about the life and times of Ambedkar. Praising Ambedkar for the remarkable work he did in drafting of the Constitution, Justice (retired) Lokur threw light on how much of the work was done by Ambedkar "single-handedly" as other members of the Drafting Committee were not able to give him the required assistance for the job.