Sagarika enters politics with TMC RS nomination

The Trinamool Congress has nominated journalist Sagarika Ghose, spouse of famous news anchor Rajdeep Sardesai, as its nominee for the upcoming Rajya Sabha

The Trinamool Congress has nominated journalist Sagarika Ghose, spouse of famous news anchor Rajdeep Sardesai, as its nominee for the upcoming Rajya Sabha polls. If she will get the required votes, this may be Ghose’s political debut.

New Delhi, India – Aug. 5, 2015: Rajdeep Sardesai Editor shoot at Hindustan instances , in New Delhi, India, on Wednesday, August 5, 2015. (Photo by Sushil Kumar/ Hindustan Times) (Hindustan Times)

Interestingly, in 2018, when veteran journalist Kumar Ketkar was nominated to the Rajya Sabha on a Congress ticket, her husband Rajdeep Sardesai had questioned journalists coming into politics, particularly by means of the Rajya Sabha route.

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“Should journalists enter Rajya Sabha on a political party ticket? That’s a question that gnaws at me after Kumar Ketkar, a friend and early mentor, became the Congress candidate from Maharashtra and the latest journalist to bite into the tempting political apple,” Sardesai wrote in his weblog put up The Journalist as Neta.

“Upper House membership is afflicted by cronyism and deal-making: quid pro quos for favours, past and present, are the order of the day,” he mentioned.

Networking, affect peddling, and the attract of energy and cash typically take priority over a real want to contribute to elevating the bar in public life, he wrote.

“Moreover, there is probably nothing like a neutral journalist, so wearing his political beliefs on his sleeve is his right as a private citizen. But when any individual joins a party he ceases to be an independent voice and a journalist without independence who cannot tell truth to power is a non sequitur. Net net: journalists do not enjoy the luxury of lawyers who can afford to wear two hats without compromising their professional integrity at some level. Once a journalist enters the political domain, he or she sheds any pretence at independent journalism,” Rajdeep wrote within the column.

He went on to query how a backbencher Rajya Sabha MP can contribute meaningfully to public life, contemplating that lots of them scarcely get the chance to talk.

“It is my unshaken belief that a professional independent journalist must ideally remain just that: an observer and chronicler with strong views but not a player or participant in the tricky game of politics. If you want to join politics, please do so, but quit journalism first,” he wrote.

Source: www.hindustantimes.com

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