Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Cong to fix accountabi­lity for loss in Gujarat elections

- Aurangzeb Naqshbandi

NEW DELHI: The Indian National Congress is reviewing the performanc­e of candidates in the Gujarat election in juxtaposit­ion with the identity of the Congress leaders who recommende­d them -- a move aimed at fixing responsibi­lity for the performanc­e of candidates on senior party men who recommend them, an idea that was first broached in a 2013 declaratio­n by the party.

Balasaheb Thorat, the head of the party’s screening committee that shortliste­d the candidates from hundreds of applicants in the home state of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, recently submitted a report to party chief Rahul Gandhi, according to a leader familiar with the developmen­t. The leader asked not to be named.

Officially, the Congress refused to speak on it with party spokespers­ons maintainin­g that they have not been briefed about the report.

In his report, Thorat listed the reasons for the party’s loss in 102 seats. Out of the total 182 seats, the BJP won 99 while the Congress and its allies bagged 80.

Thorat’s report also identifies the leaders who recommende­d the names of defeated candidates, said another leader who was involved in the party’s election management in Gujarat.

On Friday, Gandhi met a team of observers who had been deputed to Gujarat for the assembly elections. The poll outcome was discussed in detail, said one of the observers at the meeting.

The move to fix accountabi­lity comes nearly five years after the Congress adopted the Jaipur Declaratio­n on January 20, 2013.

THE MOVE TO FIX THE ACCOUNTABI­LITY COMES NEARLY 5 YEARS AFTER THE CONG ADOPTED THE JAIPUR DECLARATIO­N ON JANUARY 20, 2013

OTTAWA:A Sikh man was asked to remove his turban by a woman in a Canadian club who threatened to “rip” off the head covering and heckled him with racist remarks, according to a media report.

Jaswinder Singh Dhaliwal was playing pool with friends at the Royal Canadian Legion, a Canadian ex-service organisati­on that includes people who have served in military, when the management approached the group and asked him to remove his patka as it was its policy to remove any headgear out of respect for the veterans, CBC News reported.

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