Congress leader Shashi Tharoor faced attacks on Twitter today over his tweet on Rishi Sunak noting that it is "very rare" for the member of a "visible minority" to occupy a country's "most powerful office" and wondering whether it can happen here.
Rishi Sunak will take charge as Britain's new Prime Minister today, a day after the ruling Conservatives elected him as their leader, clearing his way to 10, Downing Street.
The 42-year-old Indian origin leader emerged as the frontrunner for the top post when former Prime Minister Boris Johnson opted out of the race in the aftermath of Liz Truss' resignation after just 45 days in office.
As it increasingly became clear that Mr Sunak's rival Penny Mordaunt does not have enough votes of Tory MPs and Rishi Sunak could take over as the next UK Prime Minister, Mr Tharoor tweeted, "If this does happen, I think all of us will have to acknowledge that theBrits have done something very rare in the world, to place a member of a visible minority in the most powerful office. As we Indians celebrate the ascent of @RishiSunak, let's honestly ask: can it happen here?"
Soon after, Twitter users fact-checked Mr Tharoor, pointing out that India has had Dr Manmohan Singh - a Sikh - as a Prime Minister. Some users slammed the Thiruvananthapuram MP for making the remark even though he had served as a minister in Dr Singh's cabinet. Others pointed out that India has had Muslim presidents and currently has Droupadi Murmu, a tribal, as head of the state.
Filmmaker and journalist Pritish Nandy said, "We too had a member of a visible minority as Prime Minister for two terms" but added, "Now it looks tough, in fact impossible".
Some users took a dig at Mr Tharoor's illustrious academic background, saying he had studied Mughal history but forgot the history of the past few decades.
Markandey Katju, former Supreme court judge who has also served as chairman of the Press Council of India, said it is "wholly irrelevant" that Rishi Sunak is of Indian origin. The question, he said, is how the Tory leader plans to salvage the UK's economy.
The Twitter storm against Mr Tharoor comes at a time when he has drawn friendly fire from his party over the recent election for Congress president, in which he finished a distant second to veteran party leader Mallikarjun Kharge.
In a sharp response to his allegations of "extremely serious irregularities" in the party's internal polls, the Congress had said the senior leader was two-faced.
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