The Sunday Guardian

ALLIES DESERT CONGRESS AT MIDNIGHT

- CONTINUED FROM P1

( NDA) would have been an exercise in futility. However, persistent efforts by the Congress finally yielded results, as he agreed to back Meira Kumar, daughter of the late Jagjivan Ram, an opponent of his mentor, the late Yashwant Rao Chavan.

On Friday morning, Pawar’s colleague and former Union minister Praful Patel tweeted to announce his party’s decision to attend the Central Hall gathering, justifying it by bluntly stating that when all parties had been on board to pass the GST law, little purpose would be served in resisting it at the time when it was being made operative. The message was both forthright and direct, as Patel’s tweets conveyed to the NDA and the UPA allies that the NCP was by no means bound to pursue the Congress agenda at all times. The distancing from the grand old party further conveyed to the BJP as well as the Prime Minister that the NCP had no political strings attached to it and thus was capable of making its own decisions if the need arose. Pawar could have underplaye­d his disagreeme­nt with the Congress, but by sitting in the front row next to BJP patriarch L.K. Advani, he was desirous of making his presence conspicuou­s.

Pawar is decidedly one of the most experience­d politician­s in the country, having assumed the office of Maharashtr­a’s Chief Minister in 1978, after outmanoeuv­ring an astute politician like Indira Gandhi. He had rejoined the Congress subsequent­ly, before being expelled from the organisati­on in 1999, when he, along with P. A. Sangma and Tariq Anwar, had raised the issue of Sonia Gandhi’s foreign origin at a meeting of the Congress Working Committee. However, he has had a functional equation with his former party and the two parties ruled the state for three terms. Ever since the defeat of the UPA in the 2014 Parliament­ary polls, the NCP has been taking independen­t stand on matters of its own importance.

Equally important is the decision of the Samajwadi Party and Bahujan Samaj Party in attending the midnight tryst with destiny on the GST issue. Their presence was also aimed at conveying in no uncertain terms to the Congress that their participat­ion in the Grand Alliance was specific to the support for a joint Opposition presidenti­al candidate and it should not be in any manner perceived as their acceptance of the Congress as the head of a likely coalition ahead of the 2019 elections. The Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar has already extended support to Ram Nath Kovind, the NDA candidate and has dissociate­d himself from a Congress led alliance, leaving the question of its leadership open.

The snub by its associates has placed the Congress in a strenuousl­y unfavourab­le position, thereby causing a hurtling setback in projecting the party as the principal challenger and nucleus of the Opposition unity. The alliance partners would want a categorica­l assurance from Sonia Gandhi that she would not attempt to foist her son Rahul Gandhi as the spearhead of the formation, since this would not be acceptable to their rank and file. Thus, the latest moves are aimed at persuading the Congress to give up on the leadership claim, yet play the role of a facilitato­r.

The party, which vehemently opposed the implementa­tion of the GST, cut a sorry figure when the primary speakers at the Central Hall function acknowledg­ed the contributi­on of various parties and government­s in bringing in the country’s foremost economic reform. President Pranab Mukherjee stated that the GST’s adoption was a tribute to the matu- rity and wisdom of Indian democracy. In other words, the Congress, which could have basked in the collective glory of all political parties, missed the opportunit­y to make its colossal contributi­on paramount.

The chinks in the Opposition unity have become more pronounced than what they were earlier and the Vice President’s election in August would further highlight the fissures. The NDA has the numbers and is comfortabl­y placed in getting its nominee elected as the Vice President. Therefore, the Left inspired efforts to make it appear like an ideologica­l confrontat­ion would look as lightminde­d and vacuous as the contest for the President is turning out to be. The game is about numbers right now, and not about political beliefs and doctrines. The battle of philosophi­es would have to wait till 2019 and the Congress will have to reinvent its role if it wants to retain its political relevance.

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