Sonia Gandhi | Biography, History, & Facts | Britannica (original) (raw)

Quick Facts

Born:

December 9, 1946, Lusiana, Veneto region, Italy

Also Known As:

Edvige Antonia Albina Maino

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Sonia Gandhi (born December 9, 1946, Lusiana, Veneto region, Italy) is an Italian-born Indian politician who was president of the Indian National Congress (Congress Party; 1998–2017, 2019–22) and chairperson of the United Progressive Alliance (2004– ), a coalition of centre-left parties.

While studying English at a language school in Cambridge, England, Sonia met Rajiv Gandhi, a mechanical engineering student at the University of Cambridge and son of Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. The couple married in 1968 and moved into the prime minister’s official residence, although Rajiv eschewed politics for a career as a commercial airline pilot. However, in 1980 his brother, Sanjay, died, and Rajiv subsequently entered the political arena. When Indira Gandhi was assassinated in 1984, Rajiv was named prime minister. Though Sonia campaigned for Rajiv, she chose to remain in the background, studying art restoration and working to preserve India’s artistic treasures.

(Read Indira Gandhi’s 1975 Britannica essay on global underprivilege.)

When Rajiv was assassinated in 1991, Sonia was seen by many as the natural heir to the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty, and she was offered the leadership of the Congress Party. She rejected the offer and refused to discuss politics publicly. In 1993, however, she visited Rajiv’s former constituency in Amethi, Uttar Pradesh, and was greeted by cheering crowds. She subsequently traveled throughout the country on behalf of trusts and committees devoted to Indian public life.

In 1998 Gandhi agreed to become president of the then struggling Congress Party. Her initial efforts were overshadowed by the party’s loss to the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) later that year in elections to the Lok Sabha (lower chamber of the Indian parliament), but she won a seat in that chamber in parliamentary polls the following year. After a nationwide campaign that targeted struggling farmers and the unemployed, the Congress Party won the 2004 Lok Sabha elections (with Gandhi retaining her seat), but it failed to secure an absolute majority. The party subsequently formed a new coalition called the United Progressive Alliance (UPA). Gandhi, however, chose not to head the government as prime minister, because her foreign birth had become a politically controversial issue. Instead, she invited the economist Manmohan Singh to serve as prime minister.

In March 2006 Gandhi resigned from the Lok Sabha and as chairperson of the National Advisory Council—which oversaw the implementation of UPA policies and provided a salary to Gandhi for her work—after accusations that she was breaking a law that banned members of parliament from holding an additional office for profit. She was reelected two months later, however, and also in 2009. Although she again won handily in the 2014 Lok Sabha elections, the Congress Party suffered a disastrous defeat at the hands of the BJP, and the UPA government was swept from power.

Sonia Gandhi’s only son, Rahul Gandhi, was also a prominent politician in the Congress Party. He was elected to the Lok Sabha for the first time in 2004 and retained his seat there in the 2009 and 2014 contests. In 2013 he was named the party’s vice president and became its de facto (though never official) candidate for prime minister in the 2014 polls. Both he and his mother retained their party offices after the electoral debacle that year. In 2017 Sonia retired as head of the Congress Party and was succeeded by Rahul, though she was selected as interim president in 2019 when Rahul stepped down after the party’s poor election performance that year. She was succeeded by Mallikarjun Kharge in 2022.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.