Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Image problem for the grand old party

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Politician­s switching parties is a phenomenon as old as politics itself. Yet, the steady attrition of leaders from the Congress — the latest being its former Gujarat unit working president Hardik Patel and former Punjab unit chief Sunil Jakhar — cannot be good news for a party struggling to come up with an attractive poll pitch and a cohesive message.

The exit of Mr Patel, months before the Gujarat election, may rankle the party more. Seen as one of the young firebrand leaders who helped the party post its best results in a generation in the 2017 polls, Mr Patel wrote a scathing letter that mirrored some of the charges levelled by Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leaders at the Congress — a disinteres­ted leadership, an anti-gujarat attitude, and a culture of insulting national icons. Many of these allegation­s smack of political opportunis­m — after all, why did Mr Patel spend years in the party if it had an antigujara­t attitude — but worryingly for the Congress, they add to a popularly held trope that the party is rudderless and unable to find a cogent ideologica­l line to fight BJP.

The party’s recently concluded Chintan Shivir Udaipur was devised to address this crisis of leadership. But it appears that the party was hesitant to bite the bullet. Until that core question is addressed, and the party chooses to respond to losses and defections in a robust and clear manner, it will be very difficult to reverse public perception about an atrophying party, or repeat its commendabl­e performanc­e in Gujarat later this year.

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