Hindustan Times (Patiala)

A tale of two captains, both ruing lost chance

- Press Trust of India letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

It’s a classic case of a captain scoring a century despite his side losing and the opposing team registerin­g a huge win but its skipper getting out for a duck.

The Him ac hal Pradesh electoral ground is no cricket pitch but the tale of victory and defeat is one that Congress’ chief ministerSi­ng hand BJP’s Prem Kumar Dhumal will surely identify with.

Winning and losing, the two leaders have probably realised, are but two sides of the same coin. While Congress leader Virbhadra Singh won his seat, his party lost the state. And, in a neat flip, the BJP wrested the state from the Congress but its chief ministeria­l candidate Dhumal was trounced.

SIMILAR FATE

Both are Thakur leaders, both are former chief ministers, both were hoping for another stint at leading the state. But the chief minister’s chair has evaded both this election.

While the BJP was poised to win 44 of 68 seats, the Congress was likely to get 21 seats.

Singh, a six-time chief minister, a scion of the Rampur-Bushahr royal family, and often called ‘rajaji’ for his royal lineage, registered a win from Arki despite the Congress receiving a drubbing.

Dhumal, a two-time chief minister who belongs to a farmer family, lost from Sujanpur to friendturn­ed-foe Rajinder Rana though his party won a decisive victory in the hill state.

Dhumal’s aide Ravinder Kumar Ravi and his MP son Anurag Thakur’s father-in-law Gulab Singh Thakur also lost their elections.

TROUBLE WITHIN

As Dhumal and Singh slugged it out, both also faced multiple hurdles at the party level.

Battling graft cases and antiincumb­ency, 83-year-old Singh shouldered the entire party’s campaign as Congress president Rahul Gandhi focused most of his attention on Gujarat, party workers said. Party leaders like Anil Sharma, who was minister in Singh’s cabinet, quit the Congress just before the polls to join the BJP.

On the contrary, the BJP’s campaign was led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi with a series of senior BJP leaders and central leaders canvassing for votes.

However, a soft-spoken Dhumal, 73, party insiders said, was upset over the party shifting him from his Hamirpur bastion to adjoining Sujanpur. The septuagena­rian leader led his party to victory but could not win his own seat.

WHAT NEXT?

According to political observers, the two ageing stalwarts are witnessing the rise of the younger generation and a changing political dynamic.

Singh is believed to have an uneasy relationsh­ip with Gandhi, while Dhumal has to compete with younger faces such as Union health minister JP Nadda.

Victory may not always be sweet. The two Himachal leaders, both contenders for power till just a few days ago, will agree.

 ??  ?? Prem Kumar Dhumal
Prem Kumar Dhumal
 ??  ?? Outgoing CM Virbhadra Singh
Outgoing CM Virbhadra Singh

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