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Congress Party President Sonia Gandhi speaks with Singh during a swearing-in ceremony at The Presidental Palace in New Delhi/AFP

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Indian PM overhauls cabinet ahead of 2014 polls

Congress Party President Sonia Gandhi speaks with Singh during a swearing-in ceremony at The Presidental Palace in New Delhi/AFP

NEW DELHI, Oct 28 – Indian Premier Manmohan Singh brought seven new faces into his cabinet on Sunday in the biggest reshuffle since his re-election as he tried to revive his party’s flagging fortunes before polls due in 2014.

Singh named Salman Khurshid, 59, as a replacement for the 80-year-old foreign minister S.M. Krishna as he attempted to dispel the image of a struggling government, which recently lost its majority.

However there was no place at the cabinet table for Rahul Gandhi, the 42-year-old scion of the Gandhi-Nehru political dynasty, who once again turned down an offer to enter government.

Speaking to reporters after a swearing-in ceremony for the new ministers, Singh said he expected his new team to remain in office until the next elections.

“Probably this is the last reshuffle,” the prime minister said at the presidential palace in New Delhi. “I don’t see early elections. Elections will be held in due course.”

The law ministry went to Ashwani Kumar, a ruling Congress party loyalist.

The other newcomers include Rahman Khan who was named as minority affairs minister, Ajay Maken who becomes housing minister and Dinsha Patel who is now mines minister.

They will be joined by Pallam Raju, who was promoted to human resources development minister. Harish Rawat was placed in charge of water resources and Chandresh Kumari was appointed culture minister.

Singh named parliamentary affairs minister Pawan Kumar Bansal as new railways minister, a post which became vacant following the pullout of a regional ally, Trinamool, from the ruling coalition in September.

The government has been mired in scandal in recent months, most notably by revelations surrounding the tender process for state-owned coal mines.

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Economic growth, which had been touching double figures at the beginning of Singh’s second term, has now slowed down to around five percent.

Trinamool’s pullout in protest at a series of economic reforms means the government is now a minority administration. It is no immediate danger of falling as it has secured the support of another regional party which is outside cabinet.

India’s two largest opposition parties scoffed at the shakeup, dubbing it a futile exercise by a scandal-tainted government.

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