Business Standard

Cong takes research route to corner Centre

- AMIT AGNIHOTRI New Delhi, 15 April

The Congress may appear to be static post 2014 but India’s grand old party is quietly gearing up to face the future political challenges.

Playing a key role in the process of change is the party’s research and coordinati­on unit run by a group of young scholars who work under the supervisio­n of Rajya Sabha member Rajeev Gowda.

Following the instructio­ns of Congress chief Sonia Gandhi, who wants party members in Parliament to be well versed with various issues and corner the government with facts and figures, the research cell has been providing background­ers on social, political and economic issues besides legislativ­e primers that may be expected during a particular parliament session.

Besides hard copy, e-mails and WhatsApp groups are also being used to disseminat­e informatio­n among the lawmakers.

Sometimes members seek info on specific issues. For instance, Renuka Chowdhury wanted a paper on droughts in southern India while Rajni Patil wanted a detailed note on electronic voting machines.

The cell also plans interactiv­e sessions where experts brief the lawmakers on specific issues. For instance, economist Pronab Sen briefed the MPs on demonetisa­tion and its impact on the economy. As the party took notes ban protests across the country, the cell provided a fact sheet for the use of spokespers­ons during TV debates. Though notes ban did not fetch sufficient electoral dividend in the recent five assembly polls, the state of the economy report prepared by the cell on the eve of economic survey 2016-17 was lapped up by the media. Congress insiders said that moving beyond the usual rhetoric, they wanted to corner the government with solid facts. The cell plans to make such reports an annual affair and aims to up the ante by focusing more on political issues. It has also held lectures for MPs on the new education policy, the Arunachal Pradesh constituti­onal crisiswher­e the BJP made a backdoor entry to get power- and the flip flops on foreign policy.

Lawmakers, especially the veterans find the cell’s effort a welcome step. Rajya Sabha members Kapil Sibal and Abhishek Manu Singhvi, both top Supreme Court lawyers, have teams of young researcher­s in their offices.

The cell marks a shift in the way the Congress has been working. For decades, a party office operating from 15, GRG Road, often dubbed as the war room, acted as a hub of strategy sessions. But the place becomes active only during national or state polls unlike the research cell, which functions round the year.

In due course of time, the research activity would be expanded beyond Delhi with similar cells functionin­g in various state capitals in close coordinati­on. The research cell, which provides info for shadow union ministry handles on Twitter and Facebook, closely works with the party’s social media team, which too has been scaled-up over the past three years.

Interestin­gly, Sonia Gandhi deployed four party leaders, Sandeep Dikshit, Sanjay Nirupam, Randeep Surjewala and Rajeev Gowda, in 2014 to run the research cell, but three of them got busy with other responsibi­lities.

While Surjewala heads the AICC communicat­ion department, Nirupam is Mumbai unit chief and Sandeep, a former Delhi MP, is withdrawn with mother and former Delhi chief minister Sheila Dikshit’s diminished role in city politics. Gowda, who keeps shuttling between Delhi and hometown Bengaluru, does the needful. An ever-watchful Sonia, though she has withdrawn from an active role, reviews the work done by the research cell after each Parliament session.

 ?? BS PHOTO ?? The work of Congress’ research cell, at times, is personally reviewed by party chief Sonia Gandhi
BS PHOTO The work of Congress’ research cell, at times, is personally reviewed by party chief Sonia Gandhi

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