The Sunday Guardian

RAHUL, PRIYANKA PROXY WAR PLAYS OUT IN CONGRESS

- CONTINUED FROM P1

holding his month long yatra, Rahul has been only endorsing decisions taken by his sister. In the party’s new set up, the sole prominent person who is close to the vice president is former Union Minister of State R.P.N. Singh, whose name Rahul had proposed for the UPCC presidents­hip way back in 2007, when Rita Bahuguna Joshi was eventually appointed by Sonia Gandhi. In 2012, Bahuguna Joshi took the flak on his behalf after the dismal performanc­e of the party in the Assembly elections, though subsequent­ly Rahul as well as his mother accepted responsibi­lity for the debacle at a press conference held in New Delhi.

Congress sources said that the plan of those who were opposed to Rahul was that he should receive the blame for the impending rout in next year’s UP elections, where all the spearheads of the campaign are his sister’s appointees. The poll results would effectivel­y end Rahul’s career and there would be little option left for the decreasing number of Congress leaders who would still be in the party to root for Priyanka as the new high command. That serious issues exist between the siblings was evident to Congressme­n in the state when during his yatra, Rahul was at pains to tell his supporters in Bundelkhan­d last month that he and his sister did not have any difference­s whatsoever. According to a senior Congress leader, there was no need to give a clarificat­ion when until this day nobody has questioned him on the subject.

The party is virtually nonexisten­t in UP and a sizable number of MLAs have already secured their berths from either the BJP or the BSP as they do not see themselves winning on a Con- gress ticket. Several leaders have been in constant touch with former Chief Minister Jagdambika Pal, who had moved to the BJP in 2014 and is now a Lok Sabha MP from the state. Pal is expected to act as a conduit for their switchover to the BJP at an appropriat­e time, since Congressme­n can visualise the virtual decimation of their party in the Assembly elections.

Questions regarding Rita Bahuguna Joshi’s exit had started being raised ever since Vijay Bahuguna plotted the fall of the Congress government in Uttarakhan­d and subsequent­ly switched to the BJP along with eight MLAs. However, until a few days ago, Bahuguna Joshi, although being gradually sidelined, stood her ground as she could not foresee her impending humiliatio­n. Sources said that Vijay Bahuguna’s main grouse was also with Priyanka and he believed her to be the reason for his ouster from the Chief Ministersh­ip. Vijay Bahuguna was appointed the CM by Rahul Gandhi, with the approval of his mother and if sources are to be believed, at that juncture, a senior Congress aide of the party president had categorica­lly told him not to comply with any request made by Priyanka and that he was at all times to listen to the instructio­ns coming in solely from Sonia Gandhi and Rahul.

The Bahugunas are a big catch for the BJP, which is seeking to attract the Brahmins back to its fold ahead of the UP polls. Rita Bahuguna Joshi as such may not, electorall­y speaking, bring in much, but her family name is powerful enough to send significan­t signals to her community. Her father H.N. Bahuguna was the Chief Minister in the 1970s and had played a pivotal role in the defeat of the Congress in 1977, when along with Babu Jagjivan Ram and Nandini Sathpathy, he floated a new outfit named Congress For Democracy. It was the CFD which played a mega role in the rout of the Congress in UP, Bihar and other northern states. Bahuguna returned to the Congress shortly before the 1980 Lok Sabha polls, following negotiatio­ns with Sanjay Gandhi and was appointed as the secretary general of the party, a post he held for nearly six months. He then parted company once again and successful­ly contested the Garhwal seat on his own steam against the Congress nominee Chander Mohan Singh Negi.

Bahuguna Joshi’s exit from the Congress is a precursor to a series of defections that are likely to take place in the future. Most senior leaders are feeling very uncomforta­ble with the new style of functionin­g. For them Priyanka is the natural leader, while Sonia Gandhi continues to endorse Rahul. The net result is that the grand old party is not looking grand any more. Given the BJP’s encouragem­ent to Congress leaders to join the saffron brigade, the joke doing the rounds is that “Vote for BJP to elect your old Congress MP”.

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