Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Top K’taka Cong leaders quitpostsa­fterbypoll­loss

SETBACK Siddaramai­ah and party’s state chief resign, accept ‘moral responsibi­lity’

- HT Correspond­ent

BENGALURU : With the Congress winning a mere two of the 15 seats which went to bypolls, the top leaders of the party in Karantaka accepted responsibi­lity for the outcome and offered their resignatio­ns to the party high command.

Congress Legislatur­e Party (CLP) leader, Siddaramai­ah, who is also the leader of opposition in the assembly, and who had singlehand­edly led the campaign of the party, quit saying he accepted “moral responsibi­lity” for the defeat.

Thecongres­swasdefend­ing12 of the 15 seats which went to bypolls but managed to win only Hunsur and Shivajinag­ar.

In a letter addressed to Congress president Sonia Gandhi, Siddaramai­ah said: “I express my sincere regrets for not being able to give satisfacto­ry results in the recently concluded by-elections held to Karnataka Legsilativ­e Assembly despite my sincere efforts. I deem it necessary to step down as leader of CLP by taking moral responsibi­lity.”

The Karnataka Pradesh Congress Committee president Dinesh Gundu Rao also expressed disappoint­ment at the outcome of the bypolls and said he would also step down from his post. Earlier in the day, another 116 69 34 3

2 senior Congress leader and the party’s main trouble shooter in the state, DK Shivakumar, said: “We have accepted defeat as people have accepted defectors.” While he said they had to agree with the mandate in the bypolls, he added: “We don’t have to be dishearten­ed. By-elections are different and general elections are different. Congress won’t vanish. It has a strong hold. No one can end Congress.”

He said the party must realise its mistakes and rectify them, but refused to comment on whether the state and central leadership had failed the party.

Even prior to the bypoll campaign, several senior Congress leaders had expressed opposition to what they called the “unilateral” decision making and “dictatoria­l” attitude of Siddaramai­ah. Former union minister KH Muniyappa and Congress general secretary BK Hari Prasad had publicly voiced their misgivings about the state leadership and demanded a change.

This is only likely to accelerate in the coming days.

A former MP of the party, who did not want to be identified, said, “Siddaramai­ah has to shoulder the entire blame for this defeat. He went around campaignin­g negatively. He didn’t ask for votes for the Congress but only exhorted the electorate to defeat the defectors. It is good that both he and Dinesh have offered to resign.”

Congress party spokespers­on UT Khader though said, “In a democracy, all of us have to respect the people’s verdict. It is true that results have not been according to our expectatio­ns. We will sit, discuss and analyse where we have to take corrective steps. I am confident we will bounce back.”

The JD(S), which was probably the biggest loser in the polls, without a single win, did not offer any comments on the outcome.

Only former CM HD Kumaraswam­y tweeted: “As if to support the opinion expressed by a senior BJP leader that the current government is abhorrent, the intelligen­t voters in 15 seats have voted for a ‘holy’ and ‘stable’ government and I congratula­te them for that.”

Political analyst Manjunath said that both the main opposition parties are likely to see a churn due to the outcome of the bypolls.

Candidate (Previous party) Arabail H Shivaram Mahesh I Kumatalli B C Patil S T Somashekar B A Basavaraja Anand Singh K Gopalaiah

Dr K Sudhakar Shrimant B Patil Jarkiholi R Laxmanrao Narayan Gowda

Chief Minister

Assembly election 2018

Despite perceived anger against defectors, only two of the 13 defectors contesting the election on the BJP’S ticket lost.

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