The Sunday Guardian

40 rebelS’ frONT wIll rOck cONgreSS bOAT

‘They want to teach Congress a lesson for ignoring genuine leaders.’

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The Congress, which is leading the Maha Kutami (Grand Alliance) in Telangana Assembly elections, faces a piquant situation as about 40 of its leaders who aspired tickets but couldn’t get, have formed a front to contest as rebels. The rebels may not get a common symbol, but will have a common name for their platform to spoil the chances of Congress. The number of rebels may increase by next week.

“Save Congress,” or “Rajiv or Indira Congress” are some of the names under considerat­ion for the front. What adds gravitas to this rebels’ front is the possibilit­y of the ruling TRS lending a helping hand to some of them who can divide the traditiona­l Congress votes in key constituen­cies so that the Opposition-sponsored candidates will lose.

Though most of them who turned up at a joint meeting of these rebels who could not make it to the three lists released by the AICC by Friday, were lightweigh­ts or leaders without much following, some of them are capable of splitting the party votes by around at least 5,000 votes, thus jeopardisi­ng the prospects of the official Congress candidates.

In 2014, as many as seven Congress candidates had lost the election by narrow margins—less than 5,000 votes—to the ruling TRS. In an Assembly of 119 seats, losing even half a dozen seats would affect the chances of the party coming to power, especially if the election is a keenly contested triangular one—among the TRS, Maha Kutami and BJP.

Former minister and Congress leader Bode Janardhan, who convened this front this weekend, told The Sunday Guardian on Saturday that they had to float this front to teach Congress leaders a lesson for ignoring the “right” and “genuine” leaders in allotment of tickets. “AICC in-charge general secretary R.C. Khuntia and TPCC president Uttam Kumar Reddy had sold the tickets,” he alleged.

Janardhan is backed by another senior Congress leader and former minister, G. Vijaya Rama Rao, who, too, expected a ticket till the last minute. They both said that there were allegation­s of change of money between the party leaders in Hyderabad and Delhi and demanded a probe into them. “There are audio tapes of bribery demands and Rahul Gandhi should respond to them,” said Rao.

They were referring to an audio tape in which three persons—one of them claiming to be representa­tive of AICC screening committee chairman Bhakta Charan Das, and the other two representa­tives of a local Congress ticket aspirant Kyama Mallesh— talking about payment of Rs 3 crore for ensuring ticket from the high command. So far, Das hasn’t responded to the authentici­ty of this tape.

Janardhan and Vijaya Rama Rao have questioned the so-called three-point criteria fixed by Rahul Gandhi for allotment of tickets—1. barring those who had lost the last election by a margin over 30,000 votes, 2. Those who had joined the party recently and 3. Those who had lost three elections consecutiv­ely. “But, there are many who flouted these norms but got tickets,” said Janardhan. Late Chief Minister N.T. Rama Rao ( NTR)’ granddaugh­ter Nandamuri Suhasini is being fielded as TDP candidate from the Kukatpally Assembly constituen­cy in Hyderabad in the Telangana elections, in a strategic decision by party president and Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Chandrabab­u Naidu. Suhasini’s entry into the poll fray is expected to electrify the Congress-led Maha Kutami (Grand Alliance) which faces an uphill task in the state capital.

Suhasini, 34, is the daughter of late Nandamuri Harikrishn­a who died in a road accident four months ago and will be the first member of NTR’s family to enter politics in Telangana. Naidu picked her after her other brothers—Nandamuri Kalyanram and Junior NTR (half brother and popular Tollywood hero)—had refused to jump in the electoral fray.

There are more reasons for Naidu to select Suhasini for the Kukatpally seat which is predominan­tly a stronghold of Andhra settlers and supporters of TDP. The seat, located on the western part of Hyderabad city, is the hub of leading business houses and shopping malls and is a hub of IT and educationa­l institutio­ns which have pushed up steeply the real estate prices in the last two decades.

In 2014, Kukatpally elected TDP’s Madhavara Krishna Rao as MLA by around a majority of 43,000 votes, even in the midst of a Telangana wave in favour of TRS. However, Rao, along with 12 other TDP MLAs, have joined TRS. In 2009, Kukatpally elected Lok Satta leader and former IAS officer Jayaprakas­h Narain.

The Kukatpally constitu-

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