Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Need to put house in order: Sonia

- Agencies letters@hindustant­imes.com

We have to take note of our serious setbacks. To say that we are deeply disappoint­ed is to make an understate­ment.

SONIA GANDHI, Congress president

NEW DELHI: Congress president Sonia Gandhi on Monday said the party has to take note of its serious setbacks in assembly polls, and face the reality to draw the right lessons and put its house in order.

Addressing a crucial meeting of the Congress Working Committee (CWC), Gandhi said she intends to set up a small group to look at every aspect that caused such reverses and come back with its findings.

The meeting of the top Congress body has been convened to deliberate and introspect on the party’s poor performanc­e in the just-concluded assembly elections.

The Congress fared poorly, drawing a blank in West Bengal and failing to win back power in Kerala and Assam, besides losing Puducherry. The party only came to power with the help of its ally Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) in Tamil Nadu.

“We have to take note of our serious setbacks. To say that we are deeply disappoint­ed is to make an understate­ment. I intend to set up a small group to look at every aspect that caused such reverses and report back very quickly,” she told the meeting in her inaugural address.

Gandhi said the party needs to candidly understand “why in Kerala and Assam we failed to dislodge the incumbent government­s, and why in West Bengal we drew a complete blank”.

“These will yield uncomforta­ble lessons, but if we do not face up to the reality, if we do not look the facts in the face, we will not draw the right lessons,” she noted.

The Congress chief asked the party general secretarie­s and in-charges of states where it lost to spell out clearly and frankly the reasons for the party’s defeat.

“I expect them to brief us very frankly on our performanc­e in their respective states. We want them to tell us why we

performed well below expectatio­n. These results tell us clearly that we need to put our house in order,” she said.

At the meeting, it was also unanimousl­y decided to defer the crucial election to the post of party president until the Covid-19 situation in the country improves, party officials aware of the developmen­t said on condition of anonymity.

Top Congress leaders at the meeting were of the view that holding the election right now would not be proper as the coronaviru­s situation in the country was very grim, the officials said.

Rajasthan chief minister Ashok Gehlot proposed that there should be no election to the post of Congress president in view of the Covid-19 situation and senior party leader Ghulam Nabi Azad seconded him.

Azad, a prominent member of the group of 23 leaders who had demanded organisati­onal elections, said at the meeting that no one in the party was seeking an election right now and it should be postponed, the officials said.

“CWC, therefore, unanimousl­y resolved to defer the elections temporaril­y in the midst of these challengin­g times,” said a resolution passed at the meeting.

The Congress president also hit out at the Modi government over the handling of the pandemic situation.

During the meeting, chief ministers of Congress-ruled states of Rajasthan, Punjab and

Chhattisga­rh gave an account of the Covid situation in their states and steps being taken to contain the virus.

Noting that the Covid-19 situation has become even more catastroph­ic in the past four weeks, she said, “Governance failures have become even more stark. Scientific advice has been willfully ignored and the country is paying a horrendous price for the Modi government’s neglect of the pandemic, indeed its willful patronage of super-spreader events that were allowed for partisan gains.”

Gandhi noted that a far deadlier second wave has now overwhelme­d us and some scientists have now cautioned about a third wave overtaking us soon.

“The public health system across the country has all but collapsed. Vaccinatio­n coverage is woefully short of need and not expanding at the rate at which it must. The Modi government has abdicated its responsibi­lity,” she alleged.

Gandhi said states are made to bear the cost of vaccinatin­g millions in the 18 to 45 age group while experts have said it would have been financiall­y more equitable for the Centre to bear the costs.

“But we know the Modi government has other priorities, pursuing grandiose projects against the force of public opinion and the face of widespread criticism. It is also a shame that the Central government continues to discrimina­te against Opposition-ruled states,” she alleged.

The Congress chief also said the internatio­nal community has rushed to India’s assistance and such a position reflects the “monumental arrogance, incompeten­ce and vain triumphali­sm of the ruling establishm­ent”.

Gandhi said the AICC’s Covid control room has prepared a detailed blueprint and similar Covid relief control rooms have been set up at the State level, as she called for better coordinati­on to make relief efforts more effective.

“We are in an unpreceden­ted public health emergency. We have repeatedly urged the Modi government to call an all-party meeting to demonstrat­e national will and resolve,” she said, adding that the single most important need is to rapidly expand vaccinatio­n coverage and ensure that no eligible citizen gets left out.

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