Business Standard

Pawar calls Oppn meeting today, excludes Congress

- ADITI PHADNIS New Delhi, 21 June More on business-standard.com

With former finance minister Yashwant Sinha by his side and political strategist Prashant Kishor as his sherpa, veteran political leader with across-the-board acceptabil­ity, Sharad Pawar, has launched a new political initiative to unite the noncongres­s opposition with a view to defeating the Narendra Modi-led Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

The NCP supremo has invited all noncongres­s political parties to his Delhi residence for a meeting on Tuesday that could set off a round of ‘conclave’ politics that was a dominant feature of Indian politics in the decades of the 1980s and led to a new alignment of forces that forced the Congress out of its dominant political position for many years to come.

Pawar’s initiative pointedly excludes the Congress. While the move is not without its internal political contradict­ions, “much more than Narendra Modi, it is the Congress that needs to worry”, said a former Congress chief minister.

Meanwhile, Congress President Sonia Gandhi has called for a meeting of party officebear­ers to discuss ways to address multiple challenges, including high petrol prices.

Prashant Kishor has had two rounds of meeting with Pawar. In the first three-hour round, among other things, the two discussed the possibilit­y of the Pawar-led Nationalis­t Congress Party (NCP) and the Shiv Sena joining up for the Brihannmum­bai Municipal Corporatio­n (BMC) elections. When a senior Congress leader called on Pawar in Mumbai (who was convalesci­ng after surgery of his mouth), he said the NCP leader conceded to him that a large opposition grouping that excluded the Congress would not be strong enough to challenge the BJP). But apparently Kishor told him otherwise and Congress leaders are homing in on Prashant Kishore’s influence on Pawar to turn him away from the Congress.

Within days of that meeting, Pawar is making his moves, surefooted and agile. The expectatio­n is that even if senior leaders like K Chandrashe­khara Rao (Telangana CM and leader of the TRS), MK Stalin (Tamil Nadu CM and leader of the DMK) and Mamata Banerjee (West Bengal CM and leader of the TMC) are unable to attend, they will send representa­tives senior enough to indicate their engagement. It is not yet clear if the Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD), an ally of the BJP till recently, has been invited. Sources advising the SAD said the upcoming assembly elections in Punjab will not yield the kind of decisive victory the Congress is seeking and the SAD would like to keep its options open if it has to approach the BJP for help in forming a government.

The CPI (M)-led Left Front has an alliance with Sharad Pawar’s NCP in Kerala. CPI(M) General Secretary Sitaram Yechury and Pawar have been in close touch. But Mamata Banerjee’s TMC and the Left parties are bitter rivals in Bengal. Can the two groups sink their difference­s in the large cause of national unity against the BJP? This will be evident on Tuesday, but many Congress leaders think this is not a deal-breaker when opposition to Modi is involved. The group that is most on the back foot is the Congress. Leaders were brave in public but conceded privately that the initiative had been taken and the Congress was nowhere in the picture: “In the given situation, there is not much he (Pawar) can do)” said a Congress leader. “But the meeting is going to be crucial. And it will lay bare before the world, the irrelevanc­e of the Congress leadership.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India