Business Standard

Congress’ poll promise yet to bear fruit

- AMIT AGNIHOTRI

There is no talk in the Congress about internal elections, despite a weak organisati­on continuing to be the bane of the 132-year-old party.

A schedule was prepared for elections to elect functionar­ies at various levels in 2015, a year after the party was reduced to 44 members in the Lok Sabha. It was hoped that VicePresid­ent Rahul Gandhi would become party chief at the end of the exercise.

However, the party dropped the plan even before its roll-out. Both in 2015 and 2016, it told the Election Commission of India that it had extended the tenure of party chief Sonia Gandhi for another year. That window ends in December this year but there’s still no word on the internal elec- tions. Despite having now lost Uttarakhan­d, Goa and Manipur to the Bharatiya Janata Party, while sliding still fur- ther down in Uttar Pradesh.

Sonia Gandhi has not been in good health and is abroad for a check-up. Rahul, out of sight for three days after the Assembly results on March 11, and having dubbed the UP loss as a “little down”, has flown to take care of her.

In 2015, sources had cited poor membership drives in states as one of the key reasons why the elections had been postponed indefinite­ly. In a recent communicat­ion to the national poll panel, the Congress said it was still waiting for updated membership lists from state units.

Party senior Mullapally Ramachandr­an was, as head of the national unit’s Central Election Authority, given the responsibi­lity to conduct the internal elections. He says units from Bihar, West Bengal and some other populous states had first sought postponeme­nt, as they were busy preparing for the Assembly polls in 2015 and 2016, respective­ly.

In between, many states suffered from natural calamities, which impacted the membership drives, added the veteran Lok Sabha member from Vatakara in Kerala. He said he was pursuing the internal polls vigorously in 2015 but was asked by the high command to defer the exercise. “The high command will take the final call in the matter,” he stated.

The plan was that the internal polls would have started at the level of district units and moved upwards from state units to the All India Congress Committee. And, end with election for the post of Congress president. Party managers wanted to ensure a unanimous election for Rahul as the next president, something which would have looked democratic and sent a message that he was not para-dropped. Sonia had become party chief through a similar process in 1998.

After every defeat in state polls — Haryana, Maharashtr­a, Assam, Kerala, Uttarakhan­d or UP — since 2014, a common refrain from Congress managers has been that the organisati­on is weak and needed to be strengthen­ed. But, little action has been seen on the ground even as the party continues to cede political space to the BJP.

Former finance minister P Chidambara­m described Prime Minister Narendra Modi as the most influentia­l politician in the country, after the SP-Congress alliance failed to stop the BJP in UP. On Saturday, he said the Congress’ organisati­onal structure was no match to that of the BJP-RSS combine. The leadership, he says, needs to devise state-specific strategies if it is serious about taking on Modi in the 2019 national polls.

Amid uncertaint­y over Rahul’s promotion as party chief, there is a clamour that the party VP needs to take some hard decisions to remove deadwood, bringing in new people to prepare for future challenges.

“Congressme­n have great expectatio­ns from Rahul and are waiting for him to take over as president. We shall do well in the next round of Assembly polls,” says veteran Anil Shastri.

After every defeat in state polls since 2014, a common refrain from Congress managers has been that the organisati­on is weak and needed to be strengthen­ed. But, little action has been seen on the ground

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