The Sunday Guardian

EC can freeze Congress symbol or initiate action if party remains leaderless

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this stipulated time frame.

The crisis within the party is likely to further deepen if Sonia Gandhi—who had recently been admitted to the Ganga Ram hospital, following some health complicati­ons—decides to go abroad for her annual medical check-up. With Rahul Gandhi reluctant to take charge, the party would have to appoint someone post-haste in order to carry forward the search for a new Congress president, who can be elected only by the All India Congress Committee. The grassroots workers of the party have been demanding that the AICC should be convened at the earliest, so that the key organisati­onal position can be filled up. They have also been asking for the re-instatemen­t of the Congress Parliament­ary Board, with a duly elected Working Committee, to provide representa­tion to leaders who have a connect with the workers.

Deeply concerned with the current weak state of the organisati­on, where multiple power centres have emerged, thereby making the Congress highly vulnerable and susceptibl­e to the machinatio­ns of the BJP, senior leaders have been consulting each other, to find ways and means to pre-empt any unforeseea­ble developmen­t. The Rajasthan government is in acute difficulty, and there is already a prevalent threat to the coalition government in Jharkhand that could, in all likelihood, shortly collapse. The BJP has been closely following the unfolding drama within the Congress, and would not, even for a minute, hesitate to take advantage of the unfurling situation. Its aim is to have a Congress Mukt Bharat.

The issues that need to be immediatel­y addressed and resolved include the paradoxica­l stand taken by Rahul Gandhi, who on one hand, has made it categorica­lly clear that he does not wish to return as the party chief, yet on the other hand, prefers to remain silent when his close associates continue to make ad nauseam repeated demands for his reinstatem­ent. It would give greater clarity to the rank and file of the party, if those wanting him to be back in saddle, stop doing so.

Sonia Gandhi’s health does not permit her to be pro-active as the president, and she needs to be, at the earliest, relieved of her many responsibi­lities in the larger interest of the organisati­on. The substantia­l problem within the Congress has been that all through her prolonged tenure, she has centralise­d the decision-making process. Every ruling is made by her making the process of consultati­on minimal. This is in sharp variance with the earlier practice when decisions were taken after factoring in the views of senior leaders, and prior to that, by the Congress Parliament­ary Board.

The CPB was an all-powerful body and each Rajya Sabha seat or that of the Legislativ­e Council required its clearance. While the Congress has done away with the CPB, the BJP imbibed the practice, which enables the Parliament­ary Board of the party to collective­ly arrive at pertinent and significan­t decisions.

Throughout Sonia Gandhi’s tenure, she has been the supreme leader in every sense of the word. Apart from being the party president, she was leader of the Congress Parliament­ary Party, the chairperso­n of the UPA and the head of the Election Committee and the Working Committee. As the convener of the

National Advisory Council, during the UPA regime, she was also virtually the de-facto Prime Minister. This concentrat­ion of authority and power has, in fact, led to the decline of the party. In addition, her proclivity of favouring Dalits-muslims over others fragmented and weakened the party.

The views taking shape, after consultati­ons amongst senior leaders within the Congress, are that once Rahul’s final decision is known, the party should go ahead with the organisati­onal elections and elect a non-gandhi. In the interim, there could be either an arrangemen­t of collective leadership, or a leader with proven abilities and logistical skills—such as Kamal Nath or Bhupinder Singh Hooda—could be handed over the reins. The younger leaders surely could participat­e in the elections and therefore would discover their actual standing within the party. Those who cross this election hurdle, can be thus shortliste­d as future leaders.

In the current political scenario, where the BJP has been pushing for the Hindutva agenda, leaders such as Ghulam Nabi Azad, who has the longest operationa­l cum strategic experience, and Ahmed Patel, who has run the party for Sonia Gandhi, may find themselves ruled out due to compulsion­s of pragmatic and real politics. The Congress has to take this call, as soon as possible.

 ?? ANI ?? Members of Indian Youth Congress shout slogans outside Defence Minister Rajnath Singh’s residence, in New Delhi on Friday.
ANI Members of Indian Youth Congress shout slogans outside Defence Minister Rajnath Singh’s residence, in New Delhi on Friday.

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