The Asian Age

Sibal goes: Cong still in denial

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The departure of senior leaders has long stopped shocking the Congress but what could shock its observers is its response to the parting shot of Kapil Sibal, the latest to leave it. The party sought to dismiss it all, saying that it is a large organisati­on and people and come and go; and that Mr Sibal, in his letter to the party announcing his resignatio­n, has said he still believed in the values of the Congress even in exit.

The party appears to have missed the import of Mr Sibal’s defection. Mr Sibal has joined not the BJP as most other deserters have but chose to ally with a formation which believes that majoritari­anism in the country can be resisted only by secular forces. Reduced to the basics, the political foes of Mr Sibal and the Congress remain the BJP; those on whom they both bank are secular formations and their ideologica­l weapons are still the same. Only the platform is different. Mr Sibal has said the present Congress does not reflect Congress values. He also believes there is an alternativ­e to the Congress when it comes to the fight for secular values.

Although not a mass leader, Mr Sibal was in the forefront of the legal and parliament­ary fight against several of the NDA government’s attempts to undermine the Constituti­on, as per the Congress. These include the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act, the abrogation of Article 370 and the recent bid by the BJPrun Delhi municipal corporatio­n to raze the homes of people based on allegation­s of being involved in communal clashes. His unequivoca­l stand on all these issues had earned him a lot of respect which finally accrued to his party. Now when he joins a new platform, the goodwill could get transferre­d with him. The Congress must worry about it.

The G-23 group of senior leaders calling for a change in the leadership and style of functionin­g of the Congress Party will now be a weakened force without Mr Sibal. They will have very few options if the party high command does not course-correct. It is up to the leadership of said party to decide if it will listen to voices from the ground or ignore these and get back to business as usual.

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