The Sunday Guardian

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

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cluding Ghulam Nabi Azad, the Leader of the Opposition in Rajya Sabha, as well as half a dozen former Chief Ministers and several erstwhile ministers of the UPA government.

Consequent­ly, the Gandhis, in a bid to quell the revolt, have both collective­ly and individual­ly started targeting the signatorie­s. The appointmen­t of Gaurav Gogoi and Ravneet Singh Bittu as the deputy leader and whip of the party, respective­ly, in the Lok Sabha, amounts to showing seniors their place. More such nomination­s are likely to follow in the not too distant future. Earlier, Manish Tewari, who is in his fifties, was being viewed as someone who could either be the leader or deputy leader in the Lok Sabha. He and Shashi Tharoor are evidently out of favour, though the latter has tried to mend his difference­s, urging party men to let bygones be bygones, as was advised by Sonia Gandhi. Azad, whose Rajya Sabha term comes to an end in January 2021, may also be replaced by someone like Mallikarju­n Kharge, taking into considerat­ion Sonia Gandhi’s known preference­s for Dalits and minorities.

The virtual meeting on the Cisco Webex was attended by Rajiv Satav, Manickam Tagore, Sushmita Dev, Ravneet Singh Bittu, Bhanwar Jitendra Singh, Gaurav Gogoi and Rajeev Gowda. K.C. Venugopal, general secretary in charge of Organisati­on acted as the admin. As usual, Rahul appeared at the meeting nearly 50 minutes late, keeping everyone waiting.

Significan­tly, five other leaders, who were earlier sounded to also be present through Webex were informed that the conference had been postponed. These five include Dinesh Gundu Rao, Amit Deshmukh, Deepender Hooda, Jitin Prasada and Anil Choudhury.

Needless to say, they are apparently displeased at being left out since this is also a signal to them, besides being an indication of the pecking order, so far as the former president is concerned.

Rahul is understood to have reiterated that many of the dissenters were in communicat­ion with the Bharatiya Janata Party. His mantra for the future was that 70-plus leaders should not be given tickets for either the Lok Sabha or Rajya Sabha, with younger leaders replacing them in key party positions. Responding to a reaction from one of the attendees, that keeping out leaders above the age of 70 from crucial decision-making processes would have its own share of repercussi­ons, Rahul stated that he did not, by a long shot, dread losing the next general election.

He was unafraid of the “backlash, and it was not a small step but a big step”.

He reminded everyone that he had known most of the elders since his father’s time and in spite of being provided pivotal positions, “their ambitious appetite remains unquenched”. He further went on to say that he was prepared for a long overhaul and was readying himself to make real structural changes. The time had come to go in for a “Kamaraj” type plan for the high command to have a free hand in reconstitu­ting the party. He cautioned the participan­ts from sharing the informatio­n with others, stating that he would come down heavily in the event of such a happening.

The ambitious plan has sent most of the attendees in a panic mode. This could sow seeds for a virtual division in the party. The assertive manner in which Rahul spoke, also demonstrat­es that he was keen to remain the principal decision-making person without having any formal position. In plainspeak, he possibly wanted to be the defacto president. However, it is most unlikely that Sonia Gandhi would permit any kind of drastic structural changes, given that she is known to be a hardcore status-quoist, having immense faith in her coterie and a handful of senior leaders.

Sources in the Congress said that the letter written by senior leaders had unsettled the Gandhis and they were willing to show the dissenters their rightful place. However, they are aware that the rank and file of the Congress agree with the points raised in the communicat­ion and want elections to be held, for not only the CWC, but also for the president’s post. There has also been a demand for the revival of the Parliament­ary Board in order to collective­ly take crucial decisions.

According to a source, the letter to Sonia Gandhi was leaked to the press only after some kind of unexpected activity was witnessed in Rahul’s camp, which at one point was considerin­g to appoint K.C. Venugopal as the interim president. Besides Venugopal, those considered extremely close to Rahul include Rajiv Satav, Manickam Tagore, Ajay Maken and Anil Choudhury. They are viewed as his cabal. However, it is yet to be ascertaine­d whether the dissenters divulged the contents of the letter or was it someone close to Sonia Gandhi who wanted to thwart any move to upgrade Venugopal. A few older leaders are also perturbed over Avinash Pande’s replacemen­t as general secretary in charge of Rajasthan by Ajay Maken. Apparently, the high command has tried to placate Pande by designatin­g him as the convener of the screening committee for the Bihar elections.

In another developmen­t, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, who is general secretary in charge of Uttar Pradesh, is seeking to be assigned Assam and some Northeast states in the same capacity, in lieu of her present assignment. This, perhaps, is under considerat­ion since the party hopes to perform well in the Assembly elections to be held early next year in Assam, Kerala and Tamil Nadu.

Veterans of the party foresee a gloomy future for the Congress. They seem to be in agreement with Indira Gandhi’s political adviser, Makhan Lal Fotedar’s observatio­n in his book, Chinar Leaves. Fotedar had pronounced that the Congress has reached a cul-de-sac and could not be revived because, “Sonia is not Indira and Rahul is not Sanjay”. This, while alluding, to the grand comeback by the party within three years, after the humiliatin­g defeat of 1977, in which both Indira and Sanjay had been trounced by their opponents.

The Congress saga will witness many more inconceiva­ble developmen­ts in the next few months.

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Rahul Gandhi

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