Deccan Chronicle

Gen Next likely to take charge of Congress

- The writer is a Delhi-based journalist Anita Katyal

When all the political parties hit the campaign trail in Uttar Pradesh, it was expected that the high-profile BJP MP from Gorakhpur, Yogi Adityanath, would stay away from it as he was said to be sulking over the distributi­on of tickets in and around his constituen­cy. The fact that the Hindu Yuva Vahini, patronised by him, decided to field its own candidates in six Assembly segments, was seen as a clear sign that the Yogi was on the warpath. But contrary to these perception­s, the fiery Yogi who has a huge following in eastern UP, is the BJP’s star campaigner in the ongoing election. Although it is true that the Yogi was angry with the party leadership, BJP president Amit Shah persuaded him to join the campaign. Mr Shah is learnt to have convinced the Gorakhpur MP that he had been specially picked by the gods to unite the Hindus, promote the Hindu faith and work for the formation of a Hindu society. As such, Mr Shah further told the Yogi, he should do the bidding of the gods and help the party usher in a Hindu rashtra and, if destiny favoured him, he could one day become UP chief minister. The Yogi was apparently taken in with this argument.

It was meant to be a show of unity but instead it turned out to be a trial of strength. Last week, Madhya Pradesh’s senior Congress leaders Digvijay Singh, Kamal Nath and Jyotiradit­ya Scindia, who are engaged in a bitter turf war in their home state, reached Bhopal by a chartered flight. Having failed to turn up for the last protest march organised by the Congress against demonetisa­tion, the three leaders made it a point to put in a joint appearance for the party’s rally against chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan. However, their rivalries surfaced as soon as they touched down in Bhopal. The three made it a point to leave the airport separately to enable their respective supporters to welcome them individual­ly. This divide was further evident at the protest rally when they got up to address the gathering. It was assumed that the party workers would respond to the speeches of the three leaders with thunderous applause. However, sections of the crowd were seen cheering each speaker selectivel­y. This was clearly an indication that each leader has his set of supporters but there is no meeting of the minds or the hearts on the ground despite their show of unity.

It is a well-known fact that Congress president Sonia Gandhi has shed her responsibi­lities and handed over the functionin­g of the party to her son and party vice-president Rahul Gandhi. Neverthele­ss, it was believed that she would campaign in her Lok Sabha constituen­cy Rae Bareli in the ongoing UP assembly elections. However, she chose to stay away. Her decision has been described by Congress insiders as a sign of the transfer of power to the next generation. As a result, it is becoming increasing­ly evident to Congress insiders that Mrs Gandhi is unlikely to contest the 2019 Lok Sabha elections and that daughter Priyanka Gandhi Vadra will instead be fielded from Rae Bareli. Though Priyanka Gandhi has been managing her mother’s constituen­cy for several years now and was even actively involved in the planning of the current assembly polls in UP, she has publicly declared that she’s not entering active politics. Mrs Gandhi has also made it known that she does not intend to carry on after she turned 70 and since she crossed that milestone last year, she is apparently keen to hand over the baton to Gen Next. It is, therefore, expected that Priyanka Gandhi will put all speculatio­n to rest and take over the reins of Mrs Gandhi’s LS constituen­cy in the next General Elections in 2019.

In case the Congress does not fare well in the current set of assembly polls, the party’s rank and file will look for somebody to blame for the poor result. Since they cannot mount an attack on Rahul Gandhi, poll strategist Prashant Kishor who was roped in by the Nehru-Gandhi scion to plan the party’s campaign in UP, Punjab and Uttarakhan­d, will be the obvious target. Congress leaders involved with the campaign are particular­ly irked as Kishor is invariably incommunic­ado, stressing he has a hotline to Mr Gandhi. They grumbled that Kishor makes tall promises but fails to deliver. One such was his promise to get cricketer Navjot Singh Sidhu to campaign in Uttarakhan­d.

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