Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Karnataka Congress suffering from lack of decisive leadership

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sion that it is on shaky ground.

To be fair, unlike its partner JD(S) which is seen as a Vokkaliga party and which won almost all of its seats in the Old Mysuru area, the Congress, in spite of its inability to get a majority, is a big tent of competing aspiration­s of various castes, class, region, and religion.

Given that its share in the ministry was limited to 22 portfolios, accommodat­ing everybody was always going to be a tough challenge. Which is also the reason why it has kept six vacancies in its share of ministries.

However, what has hurt the Karnataka Congress the most has been a lack of decisive leadership. Though Siddaramai­ah was elected as the Congress Legislatur­e Party leader and KPCC President, G Parameshwa­ra was made the deputy CM, there is a leadership vacuum in the state Congress.

After being walloped in his old Chamundesh­wari constituen­cy and barely scraping through in Badami, Siddaramai­ah is a pale shadow of his former dominant self. Unable to get cabinet berths for even his closest acolytes like MB Patil and Satish Jarkiholi, he has withdrawn into a shell, touring his new constituen­cy in a remote part of the state, rather than putting out the fires of internal dissidence.

Also, interestin­gly senior leaders like Ghulam Nabi Azad, Ashok Gehlot and even the general secretary-in-charge of the state, KC Venugopal, all of whom played a key role in government formation, have hardly been seen in the state, subsequent­ly.

Deputy CM Parameshwa­ra, of course, has never been seen as a decisive leader. While he is seen as an agreeable leader qualified to play a part in a coalition government, where the wily fathersons of JD(S) leadership run rings around him, he is unable to quell the internal revolt. Which is why CM Kumaraswam­y stepped into mollify Congress MLA MB Patil.

This was unpreceden­ted as a leader of the JD(S) was meddling in the Congress’ internal affairs.

With the Presidents­hip of the KPCC also up for grabs, every Congress leader worth his salt has thrown their hat into the ring. Every satrap within state Congress is playing a game of brinkmansh­ip taking advantage of the razor-thin majority enjoyed by the coalition. The Congress high command needs to smack down with a heavy hand if its authority is not to be eroded irretrieva­bly.

In spite of threats, no MLA is ready to face elections again. Dissidents don’t have the numbers required to overcome the anti-defection law. While understand­ably the Congress high command is wary, it needs to handle the situation with a degree of finesse, a mixture of addressing real issues and an iron fist. But first, it needs to fix leadership issues in the state by quickly appointing a KPCC president and filling a few more ministeral vacancies.

 ?? ARIJIT SEN/HT FILE ?? What has hurt the Karnataka Congress the most, has been a lack of decisive leadership.
ARIJIT SEN/HT FILE What has hurt the Karnataka Congress the most, has been a lack of decisive leadership.
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