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He has never held public office, once likened power to "poison", and saw his politician father and grandmother assassinated. Now Rahul Gandhi has taken over as leader of the party that has ruled India for much of its history. The 47-year-old's unopposed election as president of the Congress Party follows years of speculation that he would succeed his mother in the role he has been prepared for since birth.
The son, grandson and great-grandson of prime ministers, Rahul has carried the burden of expectation since his father Rajiv Gandhi was assassinated in 1991. His reputation as a reluctant leader and his lacklustre performance in the 2014 general election campaign, which he fronted, had cast doubt over his suitability for the role.
But analysts say the Gandhi family's tight grip on the party leadership - dating back to India's first prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru - made his ascension almost inevitable. His mother Sonia led the party for 19 years and has worked tirelessly to ensure her son's eventual succession.
But he faces an immense battle to revive the ailing centre-left party ahead of the next national polls due in 2019. A Financial Times editorial last month called Rahul an "amiable and pleasant fellow who lacks the will to win power or the killer instinct necessary for the cut and thrust of political battle in India".
Just 58 percent of Indians view him positively, according to a survey conducted by the Pew Research Center earlier this year that put Prime Minister Narendra Modi 30 points ahead of him in the popularity stakes. "He will be always seen as a dynast. But much will depend on how he delivers results for the party," said Gurpreet Mahajan, political studies professor at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi.
"His only shield to criticism will be performance." Rahul's supporters argue that he has landed some punches in recent months after a lengthy post-election period during which Modi's ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) appeared unassailable.
Others, however, say a dip in the BJP's popularity has has more to do with a slowing in growth under Modi, the son of a tea-seller who has repeatedly derided Rahul as a "shehzada" or prince. Rahul was born into a life of privilege, but his younger years were cloaked in tragedy.
He was 14 when his grandmother, prime minister Indira Gandhi, was slain by her Sikh bodyguards in 1984 as revenge for the storming of the Golden Temple in Amritsar. Just six years later his father Rajiv was killed by a suicide bomber when campaigning for re-election.
"In my life I have seen my grandmother die, I have seen my father die, I have seen my grandmother go to jail and I have actually been through a tremendous amount of pain as a child," he once said in a TV interview. "When these things happen to you, what I had to be scared of I lost. There is absolutely nothing I am scared of."
Rahul was educated in India and at Harvard and Cambridge, and first worked in business management in London before winning the family constituency seat of Amethi in Uttar Pradesh state in 2004. After a stint as head of its youth wing, his profile rose further when he became Congress vice president in January 2013.
But he has struggled to carve out a reputation as a politician in his own right, not helped by the fact his younger sister Priyanka brims with the charisma he is accused of lacking. He rejected offers to enter the last Congress government, instead promoting causes such as right-to-information legislation he regards as key to curbing rampant corruption and a food security bill that critics say India can ill afford. He has been at his most impassioned defending the secular tradition personified by his great-grandfather Jawaharlal Nehru, India's first prime minister, whose socialist model framed the post-independence economy.

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