The Italian-born Sonia Gandhi turned down the prime minister's post when the Congress came to power in Delhi in 2004. "I promised to the people of UP that I will be seen with the poor, on the roads and fields," Rahul Gandhi said. "My work will continue. My efforts will be to re-erect the Congress in UP."
When he had finished addressing the media, he walked into the consolatory embrace of his sister, Priyanka. And yet they both failed.
His attempt to market himself as a champion of the downtrodden, someone willing to spend a night in the hut of a Dalit, or "untouchable", did not resonate sufficiently in a state where many of the health and nutrition indicators are no better than in sub-Saharan Africa.
Likewise, for all the hype within the media about the purported "star power" of the Gandhi family, especially Priyanka, the Congress was badly beaten in those areas of Uttar Pradesh where Gandhi and his mother hold seats in the national Parliament and where his sister vigorously campaigned on his behalf.
No one can accuse Gandhi of not trying hard enough. During the election campaign, he spoke at more than 200 rallies, hurling himself into a frenetic schedule as he toured the state by helicopter.
Valerian Rodrigues, a professor of political science of Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University, said he believed the result in Uttar Pradesh and elsewhere - the Congress also lost in Goa and Punjab and the outcome was unclear in Uttarakhand - was the result of disillusionment with the national Government rather than Gandhi himself.
Allegations of corruption, political deadlock and an apparent lack of direction appear to have angered voters.
"It is a statement about governance," Rodrigues said.
There is little doubt that the result is also a body blow to the Prime Minister, Manmohan Singh, already seen as stumbling, two years away from the next general election.
A decent result in Uttar Pradesh would have boosted the Government's ability to press ahead with reforms. As it is, the result has raised questions about the party's mandate.
In Uttar Pradesh, Gandhi had set out to see the incumbent chief minister, Mayawati, roundly defeated.
That happened, but it was the rival socialist Samajwadi Party that stepped in to secure a majority in the state.
- Independent