The head of the Congress delivered a speech titled "Learning to Listen in the 21st Century" at the University of Cambridge. Rahul Gandhi, the head of the Congress, has urged innovative thinking to advance a coercive rather than a democratic atmosphere internationally. He noted a drop in manufacturing in democratic nations as a result of a transfer in production to China, claiming that this has resulted in widespread inequity and discontent that urgently require addressing. At his Tuesday speech, "Learning to Listen in the 21st Century," at the University of Cambridge, he declared, "We need fresh ideas about how you produce in a democratic context. Gandhi, a visiting fellow at the Cambridge Judge Business School, discussed how the US and China have different viewpoints on certain issues. World War II, especially after the Soviet Union's collapse in 1991. Gandhi claimed that in addition to losing industrial employment, the US has grown less open since the terrorist events on September 11, 2001. He emphasised the significance of finding a technique to compassionately hear new issues in the twenty-first century on a worldwide scale. He continued by saying that, when practised regularly and thoroughly, the skill of listening has great power. Gandhi discussed his 4,000-kilometer trek, the Bharat Jodo Yatra, through 12 states from September to January in order to raise awareness of "prejudice, unemployment, and rising inequality in India." Gandhi is on a week-long trip to the UK. He is slated to speak to an Indian Diaspora gathering and engage with members of the UK chapter of the Indian Overseas Congress a meeting in London.