The Accidental Prime Minister by Sanjaya Baru may be best described as an unofficial chronicle of the man who, in many ways, embodied the ideal of what India’s Prime Minister ought to have been—had he not been hobbled by his own innate reticence and the internecine intrigues of the Congress courtiers sworn in fealty to the “Family.” It is, in equal measure, a lament and an indictment: a lament for a statesman of unimpeachable intellect and integrity whose vision for India was persistently thwarted, and an indictment of the sycophantic ecosystem that sought to ensure that neither achievement nor approbation strayed beyond dynastic boundaries.
Baru’s narrative is an unflinching exposé—at once scathing and sorrowful—of the servile psychophancy that pervaded the Congress leadership, the unseemly egoism of its grandees incapable of countenancing an independent Prime Minister, and the bureaucratic egotripping that plagued governance. Here was a man of sterling academic pedigree, impeccable professional credentials, and profound moral seriousness—an economist of vision, a leader of quiet conviction—who might well have been the greatest Prime Minister India ever produced, had he been granted the autonomy his office deserved. Instead, he was systematically diminished, his authority circumscribed by invisible strings pulled from elsewhere.
The book’s candour is disarming and, at times, brutal. Baru spares neither the ruling establishment nor the self-righteous Left that opposed the India-US nuclear deal with ideological sanctimony. He writes not as a distant chronicler but as one who served in the sanctum sanctorum of power—as the Prime Minister’s media adviser and chief spokesperson between 2004 and 2008—and who thus offers an insider’s gaze into the paradoxes of leadership and loyalty that defined the United Progressive Alliance years.
At its intellectual core, The Accidental Prime Minister seeks to accomplish two intertwined tasks. First, to trace the improbable ascent of an academic economist—more comfortable amidst data and doctrine than demagoguery—to the nation’s highest office. And second, to illustrate how that office was persistently undermined by the very structures that should have sustained it. Baru’s most controversial, and consequently most quoted, contention is that the true epicentre of authority resided not within the Prime Minister’s Office but within the Congress’s inner sanctum—specifically, in the person of Sonia Gandhi. This duality of power, he argues, engendered a chronic tension that rendered the government’s functioning halting, hesitant, and often paralytic.
The memoir abounds with vignettes from the quotidian life of governance—press briefings, cabinet skirmishes, the delicate choreography of coalition politics, and the ceaseless intrigues that infest the corridors of power. Yet Baru’s gaze extends beyond personalities to the anatomy of institutions themselves: the tug-of-war between party and government, the role of advisers in mediating policy, and the inherent fragility of prime-ministerial authority in a coalition-ridden polity.
To be sure, this is a memoir, not a dispassionate chronicle of archival scholarship. It is shaped by proximity, perspective, and purpose—by what Baru witnessed, inferred, and chose to remember. Consequently, the book oscillates between personal reflection and political critique, often reading as a corrective to the anodyne public image of Dr. Manmohan Singh rather than as a neutral historical account. Baru’s prose, while devoid of literary ornamentation, possesses a clarity and candour that render it accessible and compelling.
In the final reckoning, The Accidental Prime Minister is both a tribute and a tragedy—a tribute to a man of formidable intellect and integrity, and a tragedy of a system that preferred loyalty over leadership, symbolism over substance. It leaves the reader with a profound sense of admiration for the soft-spoken economist who led India through a decade of transformative yet tumultuous change, even as it compels reflection on how history often conspires to eclipse its most deserving protagonists.
Picture taken from the internet not with an intention to violation of copyright.
