Millennium Post

Will tour MP to unite Cong: Digvijay

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: Ruling himself out as a chief ministeria­l aspirant, senior Congress leader Digvijay Singh has said that he would travel across poll-bound Madhya Pradesh to unite his party to defeat the BJP which is in power in the state for 15 years.

The state goes to polls later this year and Singh, who was its chief minister between 1993 and 2003, said that he has conveyed his plan of a state-wide tour to Congress president Rahul Gandhi.

He, however, insisted that it should not be seen as an attempt to push his candidatur­e for the chief ministeria­l post and asserted that there was "no question" of him being a contender for the job.

"I will take up the challenge of putting all Congress workers together in each assembly segment and district. And for that, some senior party leaders, who are not aspirants of any ticket, assembly or parliament­ary elections, would work with me," Singh told PTI journalist­s in an interactio­n.

"We will go to every district and bring all workers together. We hope to start by May 15 and travel throughout the state. Who will become chief minister, ministers or MLAS, all these can be discussed later," the 71-year-old Congress general secretary added.

Singh recently returned from a self-imposed sabbatical after concluding 'Narmada Parkirama' of over 3,300 km on foot in six months.

The yatra, an arduous pilgrimage considered very holy by the faithful, has given him a political boost, many political watchers believe, as it has helped him connect with the masses and the Congress' rank and file across the big state, and put a string of controvers­ies behind him.

Asked about reports suggesting that he has supported Kamal Nath as the next chief minister if the Congress wins the polls, Singh said that he had only reiterated his stand of 2008.

"During my Parikrama, journalist­s came to me and said that Digvijay ji you had talked about Kamal Nath becoming chief minister in 2008. I said, yes I had said so. So, the journalist­s asked me what my opinion is now. I said I don't change my decisions. Rest, Rahul Gandhi ji will decide what he has to. Then the journalist­s ran a story saying Digvijay Singh supports Kamal Nath," the veteran leader said.

Rahul Gandhi recently restructur­ed the Congress' Madhya Pradesh unit by appointing Kamal Nath and Jyotiradit­ya Scindia as its president and campaign committee chairman respective­ly. He also named four working presidents for the state namely, Bala Bachchan, Ramnivas Rawat, Jitu Patwari and Surender Choudhary as part of the organisati­on changes.

Singh also pitched for allowing party MLAS pick their legislatur­e leader in Parliament­ary democracy.

He cited example of how he had become the state's chief minister after winning an election between him and another contender for the post, Shyama Charan Shukla in the 90s.

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