Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Congress goes for young blood in structure revamp

- Aurangzeb Naqshbandi aurangzeb.naqshbandi@hindustant­imes.com CONTINUED ON P 22

AT LEAST 30 OF 44 NEW SECRETARIE­S APPOINTED TO ASSIST SENIOR CONGRESS OFFICEBEAR­ERS ARE FIRSTGENER­ATION POLITICIAN­S

NEWDELHI: At least 30 out of 44 new secretarie­s appointed to assist senior Congress office-bearers in different states are first-generation politician­s, signalling a shift in the grand old party’s organisati­onal structure, in line with a speech made last month by newly anointed president, Rahul Gandhi.

Approximat­ely 70 other young leaders have been shortliste­d for similar responsibi­lities in the second rung of leadership in an ongoing reshuffle in the party, according to Congress functionar­ies familiar with the developmen­t.

The 47-year-old Rahul Gandhi, in a speech at the Congress plenary in Delhi on March 18, had said that one of his main priorities was to “break the wall between workers and leaders” and to bring people sitting on the back benches to the front lines.

Some of the first-generation politician­s picked by Rahul Gandhi are Prakash Joshi from Uttarakhan­d, Manickam Tagore from Tamil Nadu, PC Vishunadh from Kerala, Chandan Yadav from Bihar, Shaikh Mastan Vali from Andhra Pradesh, Jitu Patwari from Madhya Pradesh and Zubair Khan from Rajasthan. Patwari was last week appointed the working president of the Congress in MP in the run-up to the elections.

“Rahul-ji has maintained that the political system can be changed only if more and more young people join politics. He has also ensured that the doors of the Congress party remain open for the common people and first generation leaders. He has kept his promise,” said Prakash Joshi, who now assists senior leader Ghulam Nabi Azad in managing party affairs in Uttar Pradesh.

Chandan Yadav, who has been made the secretary in-charge of Chhattisga­rh, agrees. “He [Gandhi] has been trying for a more inclusive Congress in a real sense. That is why we see social, regional and gender balance. Even profession­als from different fields have been included in the party and given responsibi­lities.”

The Congress has long been criticised for encouragin­g dynastic politics, with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Prime Minister Narendra Modi repeatedly targeting the “one family” that ruled the country for 37 years since Independen­ce.

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