Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Infighting, fund crunch cost Cong

- Aurangzeb Naqshbandi letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: Relegated to the political margins in Tripura and Nagaland for decades, the Congress’s failure to open its account completed the party’s decimation in the two states.

Infighting, lack of resources, a non-visible central leadership, a lacklustre campaign, organisati­onal weaknesses and the perceived tacit understand­ing with the Left appeared to have cost the Congress dear in Tripura.

In Tripura, the Congress’ vote base shifted to the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). From a vote share of 36.53 % in 2013 when it contested 48 seats and won 10, its share plunged to 1.8% this time with zero seats.

The BJP’s sustained campaign that the Congress was deliberate­ly lying low in Tripura to help the ruling Communist Party of India(Marxist), CPI (M), consolidat­ed the anti-Left votes in its favour. The Congress was not considered an alternativ­e or a strong opposition to the CPI(M), and that led to big gains for the BJP.

Congress chief Rahul Gandhi addressed just one election meeting in Tripura on the last day of the campaign on February 16. Polling was held two days later.

State Congress leaders had complained about the lack of interest on the part of the general secretary in charge of North East, CP Joshi, in the party affairs in Tripura.

However, Tripura Congress chief Birajit Sinha attributed the BJP’s victory to the fact that it is in power at the Centre as well.

“We don’t have a government at the Centre and that is why the people who were against the CPM voted for the BJP,” he said.

Sinha claimed that this was not the first time that the Congress faced such a situation in Tripura, recalling that the party lost badly in 1977 but regained power in 1988. Samir Ranjan Barman was the last Congress chief minister of Tripura; he was at the helm until March 1993.

NAGALAND STRUGGLE

In Nagaland, the Congress was never in the game. It not only struggled to find candidates, but also failed to provide adequate resources to fight the elections.

A fund crunch also forced the Congress to withdraw five candidates, leaving 18 in the fray. In 2013, the party had won eight seats out of the 56 it contested and secured a 24.89% vote share.

State Congress president Kewe Khape Therie squarely blamed Joshi for the party’s dismal performanc­e. “Joshi has systematic­ally destroyed the Congress not only in Nagaland but in the entire northeast. For the past more than two years, he did not visit the state. He even prevented Rahul Gandhi from campaignin­g.” Joshi declined to comment.

“We were not given any funds or any other logistic support. I think Congress has not only given up on Nagaland but the entire northeast. When no Congress leader came for campaignin­g and the party showed no interest in Nagaland, the intent was clear,” he said.

Therie, however, said the money factor played a key role in the Nagaland elections. “Money is the only considerat­ion this time. No other issue.”

For its part, the Congress focused on Meghalaya, but there too, it will need the support of regional players and independen­ts to retain power.

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