The Sunday Guardian

Rahul likely to be made working president soon

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suaded Sonia Gandhi to hold on to her post, given that the party rank and file was yet unready to accept Rahul as the chief and in view of next year’s Assembly elections in several states, including Uttar Pradesh, which would determine the future course of national politics. Sources said that Priyanka too shared this view and prevailed upon her mother to carry on as the president.

Party insiders believe that Rahul and Priyanka are politicall­y not always on the same page and their difference­s on crucial issues have often come out in the open during their respective interactio­ns with Congress activists and workers. It is being said that the party’s month-long Deoria to Delhi Yatra in SeptemberO­ctober was originally con- ceived keeping Priyanka in mind, but anticipati­ng that it would overshadow him on the political stage, Rahul decided to undertake it himself. Several months ago, Priyanka had informed Rahul that he could do whatever he wanted to do regarding appointmen­ts in the party, but as long as their mother was physically fit, she would continue to remain at the helm of affairs. This was obviously done to ensure that there were no mass desertions from the grand old party whose grassroots workers desire to see Priyanka taking over the reins of the organisati­on nurtured, amongst others, by four generation­s of the Nehru Gandhis. Priyanka’s visage reminds them of Indira Gandhi.

Sources said that while it took some effort, Rahul seems to be comfortabl­e with the working president’s designatio­n, which technicall­y does not exist in the Congress Constituti­on, but sets him apart from the rest since it was once conferred in the 1980s on UP strongman and Indira Gandhi loyalist, the late Kamlapati Tripathi. It is another matter that Kamlapati Tripathi, whose grandson, Rajeshpati “Abu” Tripathi is now involved in the UP preparatio­ns, had on one occasion openly revolted against the late Rajiv Gandhi and had to be subsequent­ly pacified with enormous difficulty.

Incidental­ly, there was no designatio­n such as the vice president in the Congress Constituti­on either, but the post was created by Rajiv Gandhi in the late 1980s to placate Arjun Singh as also to give him a raised and exalted status to counter Vishwanath Pratap Singh’s growing influ- ence in the Rajput community in particular. The late Jitendra Prasada, who was Rajiv’s political adviser in the postMakhan Lal Fotedar era, was, in the 1990s, also appointed the vice president by Sitaram Kesri during the latter’s brief tenure as the party president. Similarly, the Congress had nominated Hemvati Nandan Bahuguna as the secretary general in 1980 to furnish him a distinct identity on his return to the party fold by the late Sanjay Gandhi. Bahuguna exited from the Congress within six months to successful­ly contest on his own steam against Chander Mohan Singh Negi from Garhwal.

Sources said that there is also pressure on the Congress president to appoint Priyanka as the secretary general to accord her a formal role in the party affairs. It has been a subject of speculatio­n whether Priyanka would extensivel­y campaign in the Assembly elections in UP. More than a handful of Rahul’s supporters are eager that she does so, particular­ly because her presence and active participat­ion would not have any positive impact on the final outcome, especially because the contest is primarily going to be between the BSP and the BJP, with the Congress and the Samajwadi Party amongst the also-rans. This would also, subsequent­ly, help in containing the clamour for bringing her on the political centre stage and silence her supporters, thus leaving Rahul as the unquestion­ed leader of the party.

It is also said that the party was virtually divided between the supporters of Rahul and Priyanka and a proxy war was going on between them. Most of the old guard and those belonging to Sonia Gandhi’s coterie are against Rahul, though they themselves are responsibl­e for the party’s plight, despite the fact that they attempt to shift the blame on the vice president. Factionali­sm is not new to the Congress, but this time it has boiled down to Rahul vs Priyanka groupies. For instance, if Ajay Maken is aligned with Rahul in Delhi, his archrival Sheila Dikshit has jostled to proximity to Priyanka, who helped her in her projection as the party’s Chief Ministeria­l face in U.P.

In the meanwhile, Sonia Gandhi is in a serious dilemma. She is anxious to see her son succeed her, while her colleagues would prefer her daughter. Varied developmen­ts are likely to unfold in the grand old party later this month.

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