Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Elections must go back to the ballot: Congress

PLENARY Resolution urges EC to shun use of EVMs; party open to alliances in 2019

- Aurangzeb Naqshbandi aurangzeb.naqshbandi@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: Setting the tone for the next Lok Sabha elections a year before they are due, the Congress on Saturday said it will adopt a “pragmatic approach” on alliances with compatible parties to defeat the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), and demanded the reintroduc­tion of ballot papers to check what it called the manipulati­on of poll outcomes through misuse of electronic voting machines (EVMs).

On the opening day of the party’s 84th plenary session, Congress president Rahul Gandhi accused the BJP of “dividing” the country by spreading hatred. His mother and predecesso­r Sonia Gandhi termed PM Narendra Modi’s pre-poll promises “dramebazi ,” or theatrics.

The BJP dismissed the remarks as “mere political rhetoric” that the people of the country have rejected repeatedly. “Both mother and son have been making same baseless allegation­s since 2014. People of India have rejected them and brought BJP to power in state after state, while the Congress has become politicall­y extinct,” the ruling party’s spokespers­on GVL Narasimha Rao said.

In a political resolution adopted on the opening day of the plenary session, the main opposition party said Modi’s pitch for simultaneo­us polls was “misplaced, impractica­l and incompatib­le” with the Constituti­on. “There are apprehensi­ons among the political parties and the people over the misuse of EVMs to manipulate the outcome contrary to the popular verdict,” it said. The resolution on agricultur­e and employment talked about imposing a 5% cess on the incomes of the top 1% richest Indians to create a national poverty alleviatio­n fund.

The key takeaway from day one was the Congress party’s resolve to evolve a common workable programme with likeminded parties to defeat the BJP in the 2019 elections.

While the party has decided to continue with the alliance strategy adopted at its Shimla conclave in 2003, a year before it led the United Progressiv­e Alliance (UPA) to power, it did not insist on leading a coalition this time.

The Shimla declaratio­n had rejected the 1998 Pachmarhi resolution that laid special emphasis on following the ‘ekala chalo (go it alone)’ line. The stage for a broader understand­ing against the BJP has already been set with Sonia Gandhi, chairperso­n of the UPA that lost power in 2014, hosting a dinner for leaders of 20 parties at her residence on March 13.

This was followed by a series of meetings between Rahul Gandhi and Nationalis­t Congress Party (NCP) chief Sharad Pawar.

The recent bypoll outcome in Gorakhpur and Phulpur parliament­ary seats in UP, both of which were wrested from the BJP by the Samajwadi Party, has also sent a clear message to the opposition parties that the BJP juggernaut could be stopped only if they come together.

ADOPTING A RESOLUTION MOVED BY PUNJAB CM CAPT AMARINDER SINGH, THE PARTY PROMISED FARM LOAN WAIVER IF VOTED TO POWER

NEWDELHI: The Congress on Saturday rolled out its road map for the 2019 Lok Sabha elections in an attempt to stop the Bharatiya Janata Party‘s (BJP) juggernaut.

The grand old party not only stuck to its line of adopting a “pragmatic approach” in forging alliances with ‘like-minded’ parties and evolving a common workable programme to defeat the saffron fold in 2019 but also promised sops to the farmers and youngsters if voted to power.

However, unlike the Shimla declaratio­n of 2003 when it insisted on leading the coalition, the Congress this time remained silent on the leadership issue. Since receiving its worst-ever electoral drubbing in the 2014 Lok Sabha polls, the Congress has suffered defeats in successive assembly elections and is now in power in just Karnataka, Punjab, Mizoram and Puducherry.

Retaining Karnataka, which found resonance in the speeches of former party chief Sonia Gandhi and others, is crucial for the party to prepare for the 2019 general elections polls with a resurgent spirit.

On the opening day of the 84th plenary session, two resolution­s were adopted by a gathering of Congress leaders and workers from across the country.

In the political resolution, the Congress urged the Election Commission (EC) to revert to ballot papers instead of EVMs, which have come under scrutiny following tampering allegation­s.

It also said Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s push for simultaneo­us polls was “misplaced, impractica­l and incompatib­le with the Constituti­on” and would have “serious implicatio­ns”.

Being held after a gap of seven years, the theme of the 84th Congress’ plenary session is “Change is Now” (Waqt Hai Badlav Ka)”.

The resolution on agricultur­e, employment and poverty alleviatio­n, moved by Punjab chief minister Captain Amarinder Singh, promised a loan-waiver scheme for small and marginal farmers similar to that announced by the UPA government in 2009.

The main Opposition party hit out at the Modi government for its “flawed” and “anti-farmer” policies that have caused an “agrarian crisis” in the country.

The Congress also said it would create a national poverty alleviatio­n fund and impose a 5% cess on incomes of the top 1% richest Indians.

Battling defection with the BJP poaching many of its leaders, the Congress demanded that defectors should be debarred from contesting elections for six years in order to check the “brazen misuse of money power to create political instabilit­y”.

Senior party leaders Mallikarju­n Kharge and Ajay Maken stressed on the need to check infighting within the party, saying the “Congress can be defeated by the Congress only” .

In apparent references to the arrest of former finance minister P Chidambara­m’s son Karti hidambaram in an alleged money laundering case and the CBI charge-sheet against former Haryana CM Bhupinder Singh Hooda in an alleged land scam, the party condemned the BJP government for “brazen abuse of power and misuse of central agencies for targeted political vendetta to harass, humiliate and persecute” its political opponents.

The Congress also attacked the BJP-RSS ideology, alleging that it was creating an environmen­t of “distrust, fear and intimidati­on” in pursuit of their “insidious and divisive agenda”.

It said the judicial system needed urgent reforms for effective and timely dispensati­on of justice with special attention towards reducing the number of pending cases and providing affordable justice.

The Congress also pledged its support to the demand for special category status to Andhra Pradesh, an issue that has prompted the Telugu Desam Party (TDP) to quit the NDA and move a no-confidence motion against the Modi government. The YSR Congress Party has separately moved a similar motion.

“A resurgent Congress alone shall win back the idea of India as envisioned by our nation’s founding fathers,” read the political resolution moved by Kharge.

For some, farmers are in danger, for some women and for some the youth. My friends, remove the glasses of sections, my entire India is in danger. JYOTIRADIT­YA SCINDIA, Congress leader Hindutva is not Hinduism… we must not surrender the Hindu space to the BJP. SHASHI THAROOR, Cong leader

 ?? MOHD ZAKIR/HT PHOTO ?? Senior leaders applaud as Congress president Rahul Gandhi embraces his mother Sonia Gandhi after her address at the party’s 84th plenary session in New Delhi on Saturday.
MOHD ZAKIR/HT PHOTO Senior leaders applaud as Congress president Rahul Gandhi embraces his mother Sonia Gandhi after her address at the party’s 84th plenary session in New Delhi on Saturday.
 ?? MOHD ZAKIR/HT PHOTO ?? (From left) Congress leaders Randeep Singh Surjewala and Jyotiradit­ya Scindia with party president Rahul Gandhi at the grand old party’s plenary session in New Delhi on Saturday.
MOHD ZAKIR/HT PHOTO (From left) Congress leaders Randeep Singh Surjewala and Jyotiradit­ya Scindia with party president Rahul Gandhi at the grand old party’s plenary session in New Delhi on Saturday.

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