The Sunday Guardian

Rahul proposes to push 70-year-old colleagues into retirement

- PANKAJ VOHRA NEW DELHI

In an obvious attempt to sideline and push out senior leaders of the party, former Congress president, Rahul Gandhi, proposes to retire colleagues who are over 70 years old, in a phased manner, so as to accommodat­e his supporters and leaders from the younger generation. The “weed out deadwood” operation has been apparently inspired by the Marg Darshak Mandal policy of the BJP, where leaders who had attained 75 years, were marginalis­ed, having to give up important positions. Rahul’s intention is to give the Congress a face-lift in a bid to present a youthful countenanc­e.

Although it is improbable that Sonia Gandhi, the interim president, shall allow the unpreceden­ted plan to carry through, yet in case it is implemente­d, it will, in practical terms, mean that this would be the last and final tenure in Rajya Sabha of senior leaders such as Ghulam Nabi Azad, Ambika Soni, Ahmed Patel, P. Chidambara­m, Digvijaya Singh and Mallikarju­n Kharge. It will also imply that Chief Ministers, including Captain Amarinder Singh, Ashok Gehlot and V. Narayanasa­my may not ever occupy the august office they are presently holding and senior leaders such as Bhupinder Singh Hooda, Siddaramai­ah and Kamal Nath may not be in the reckoning for any future positions.

Speaking to a select group of younger party functionar­ies on the Cisco Webex platform, a day after the marathon virtual meeting of the Congress Working Committee, Rahul made it clear that he was looking for a “transforma­tive change and not any incrementa­l change”. In other words, the party should reflect the aspiration­s of a new India and for this to happen, it was of little significan­ce to him if the Congress, yet again, lost the next election.

The proposed blueprint assumes substantia­l importance since both Rahul and Sonia were targeted in a letter signed by 23 top Congress functionar­ies, inhow

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India