New Delhi: Elections are not just about voting, Congress leader Rahul Gandhi said, noting that even Iraq's Saddam Hussein and Libya's Muammar Gaddafi used to have and win polls.
"Saddam Hussein and Gaddafi used to have elections and used to win them. It wasn't like there was no voting but there was no institutional framework to protect that vote.
"An election is not simply people going and pressing a button on a voting machine. An election is about narrative. An election is about institutions that make sure that the framework in the country is operating properly, an election is about the judiciary being fair and a debate taking place in parliament. So you need those things for a vote to count," he said in a conversation with Prof Ashutosh Varshney of Brown University on the "Democracy And Dialogue".
On criticism of India by certain foreign groups and institutions, Gandhi said: "We don't need foreign institutions to certify this... they have their views and frankly we don't need a stamp from them. But what they saying is correct, the situation is much worst than they imagine."
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He alleged that be it the parliament, judiciary or the media, there is a constant onslaught on the institutions by the current government.
On the 'G-23' letter and subsequent meeting of the 'dissident' leaders in Jammu, Gandhi said that it is because that Congress has internal democracy, they can speak.