Hindustan Times (Noida)

Cabinet contention to Channi’s assertion: Why Sidhu resigned

- Ramesh Vinayak letters@hindustant­imes.com

CHANDIGARH: Punjab Congress president Navjot Singh Sidhu’s surprise resignatio­n on Tuesday, less than 10 weeks after he took over the reins of the faction-ridden state unit, was a culminatio­n of a series of behindthe-scenes events that left him peeved since the resignatio­n of his bête noire Captain Amarinder Singh on September 20.

A photo-op bonhomie that Charanjit Singh Channi and Sidhu had publicly exuded soon after the former’s surprise elevation as Punjab’s first Dalit chief minister quickly evaporated, giving way to a tussle over power politics. Here are five reasons why the 57-year-old mercurial cricketer-turned-politician called it quits, abruptly ending his 67-day innings at the helm of state Congress:

Randhawa’s rise

Though the Congress high command endorsed the newly-appointed Pradesh Congress Committee chief’s choice of Channi as chief minister after the cloakand-dagger games that edged out Sidhu’s potential challenger­s in Sunil Jakhar and Sukhjinder Randhawa, it nixed his opposition to the appointmen­t of Randhawa, a prominent Jat Sikh face, as deputy chief minister.

Sidhu, also a Jat Sikh, viewed the Majha heavyweigh­t’s elevation as a threat to his chief ministeria­l ambitions in the 2022 assembly poll sweepstake­s. Sidhu was miffed at being overruled on Randhawa, who had made common cause with him in the rebellion against Amarinder Singh. Sidhu had pressed for a complete cabinet overhaul for an image makeover and to jettison anti-incumbency of the Amarinder era.

Cabinet contention­s

Much to Sidhu’s consternat­ion, he had a limited say in the formation of the 15-member cabinet on Sunday.

The cabinet had an unmistakab­le stamp of Rahul Gandhi, who retained several of the Amarinder loyalists — a damage-limiting move to deny the sulking former chief minister a chance to emerge as a rallying figure of discontent­ed party leaders.

Return of Rana

What added insult to Sidhu’s injury was the return of Rana Gurjit Singh, a sugar baron lawmaker from Kapurthala, to the cabinet four years after he had to quit the Amarinder Singh-led ministry over allegation­s of his collusion in the sand auction scam. Though Rana was absolved by a commission of inquiry, Sidhu doggedly opposed his return on “ethical grounds”, but the high command overlooked his objections and that of eight party MLAS from the Doaba region who, hours before the swearing-in, raked up Rana’s tainted past in vain.

Channi checkmates

Sidhu was also miffed over Channi’s assertion — undoubtedl­y, with the high command’s backing — in the allocation of ministeria­l portfolios. On Sunday, Channi gave the powerful home department to Randhawa, who will now directly supervise the 2015 sacrilege and police firing cases, and drug mafia investigat­ions. An action on the electorall­y-sensitive issues, as the Channi government has avowedly promised, could potentiall­y bolster Randhawa’s profile, which doesn’t sit well in Sidhu’s scheme of things.

Tussle over top posts

What came as the last straw was Channi exercising the high command-mandated leeway and ignoring Sidhu’s push for the appointmen­t of Siddhartha Chattopadh­ayaya as director general of police and DS Patwalia as advocate general.

The chief minister, in a deft move to shake off perception about the PCC chief calling the shots in his government, played hardball on Sidhu’s intense lobbying, and went ahead with his own choices, appointing Iqbal Preet Singh Sihota and APS Deol for the top police and law office posts, respective­ly. That galled Sidhu and became the last catalyst in his doing what he has done many a time before: calling it quits on “high principles”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India