The Sunday Guardian

FEUDING FACTIONS WORRY CONGRESS IN RAJASTHAN

- CONTINUED FROM P1

tee, which happens to be the ultimate authority for ticket finalisati­on. The Congress president divested them of their responsibi­lities, in the wake of reports that they had made their recommenda­tions due to financial considerat­ions, and asked senior leaders to examine the whole matter before giving him their account.

Sources said that many of the dissenters on Saturday had swarmed in from Tonk, from where Pilot has been fielded, and were supporters of Zakiya, the party nominee who had lost in 2013. It is after several decades that the Congress has decided to give the party nomination to a non-Muslim, since Tonk is seen as a constituen­cy once ruled by the Nawabs and has a sizeable Muslim population—close to 50,000. Tonk also has nearly 25,000 Gurjars, the same caste as Pilot’s, as well as 10,000 Malis, the community to which Gehlot belongs. Going by the assumption that Muslims cannot vote for the BJP and thus would vote for the Congress, Pilot should not have any difficulty in comfortabl­y sailing through.

However, the tricky dimension to the issue is that some party leaders are worried that denial of ticket to Zakiya could send a wrong signal, that the Congress too was unwilling to field Muslim nominees in its current competitiv­e Hindutva race with the BJP. The Muslims are upset that once a non-Muslim procures the nomination, it could become a precedent for the future as well.

While several surveys have concluded that Rajasthan is the state most likely to slip out of the BJP’s hands in the current Assembly polls, the BJP is not giving up the fight. Known equally for her aggression and arrogance, Vasundhara Raje has relentless­ly been campaignin­g and has already declared Pilot to be a “Delhi boy, and an outsider...and the partying kind”. This, despite the fact, that Pilot has represente­d both Dausa and Ajmer in Parliament. In 2014, he had lost from Ajmer to Sanwar Lal Jat. In retaliatio­n, the Congress has also hit back describing Vasundhara Raje as an outsider, since she is originally from Gwalior, but the Chief Minister keeps reiteratin­g that she is the daughter-in-law of Rajasthan. Because of obvious implicatio­ns, the Congress has refused to react.

Congress veterans believe that the protests were a part of the game and that they were a normal feature in every party including the BJP. However, in the latest instance, these may have something to do with the ongoing tussle between Pilot and Gehlot, who managed to corner the maximum number of seats in the first list, and is once again viewed as the future Chief Minister of the state. Gehlot is contesting from Sardarpura in Jodhpur and the Congress high command in its efforts to ensure good results has fielded all known leaders. As an illustrati­on, Girija Vyas is contesting from Udaipur and former Rajasthan Congress chief, C.P. Joshi, who lost by one vote in 2008, is the candidate from Nathdwara.

Unlike Madhya Pradesh, the Congress high command has ensured that the next Chief Minister of Rajasthan, in the event of the party coming to power, would be from amongst the newly elected legislator­s.

In Madhya Pradesh the options are open, where the party is being collective­ly led by Kamal Nath, Digvijaya Singh, Ajaya Singh (son of the late Arjun Singh) and Jyotiradit­ya Scindia.

Sources said that Rahul Gandhi, while distributi­ng tickets, is also monitoring the winning prospects of each candidate, besides keeping an account of those who recommende­d the names vouching for their winnabil- ity. It is being said that any top functionar­y, who is able to secure victory for the maximum number of the persons he had recommende­d, would be finally declared as the leader and possible Chief Ministeria­l candidate. The buoyant mood in the Madhya Pradesh Congress is because of the able and precise direction provided by Kamal Nath, easily the most accomplish­ed organiser in the Congress camp; compounded by acute factionali­sm in the BJP ranks.

A senior Congress leader said that while factionali­sm and dissident activity in the Congress is reported liberally by the media, the bickering in the BJP seldom gets highlighte­d. The leader conceded that his party had a last mile problem, and the BJP because of RSS support, was better equipped in dealing with micro-poll management that is vital on the final day of voting.

The Assembly elections that are seen as the precursor to the 2019 Parliament­ary elections would have huge political ramificati­ons. The stakes for Rahul Gandhi are extremely high, while for Narendra Modi, any defeat in the states held by the BJP would break the winning momentum. Achche din, for whoever wins, are round the corner.

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