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Rediff.com  » News » Cong leaders spar over demand for change in party leadership

Cong leaders spar over demand for change in party leadership

Source: PTI   -  Edited By: Utkarsh Mishra
March 16, 2022 16:46 IST
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Senior Congress leaders Mallikarjun Kharge and Salman Khurshid on Wednesday hit back at their party colleague Kapil Sibal and other leaders of the G-23, alleging that they were trying to break the party by continuing to hold meetings even after the Congress Working Committee (CWC) had discussed 'all' issues during its recent meeting.

IMAGE: Congress interim president Sonia Gandhi with party MP Rahul Gandhi, the Congress Working Committee meeting, in New Delhi, on Sunday, March 13, 2022. Photograph: Atul Yadav/PTI Photo

Kharge said no one can weaken party president Sonia Gandhi as the entire Congress, 'from the streets to the national capital', is with her.

Kharge's swipe at the G-23 leaders came even as they are scheduled to meet in the evening at Sibal's residence to chalk out further strategy, after the CWC meeting on Sunday reposed 'full faith' in Gandhi and asked her to initiate changes to strengthen the party.

 

"Let them do 100 meetings. No one can weaken Sonia Gandhi ji. The Congress party is with her from the streets to Delhi. These people will continue to meet and give speeches," he said.

"Sonia Gandhi is taking all steps that have been discussed at the CWC. If they (G-23 leaders) still speak like this, it means they are trying to break the party," Kharge further said.

Taking a swipe at Sibal for criticising the Gandhi family's leadership, Khurshid asked when did he fight an election for any position in the party.

Saying it was a 'bit sad' to complain after receiving so much from the organisation, Khurshid also attacked the 'Group of 23' signatories, including Sibal, who wrote a letter to Sonia Gandhi in 2020 seeking sweeping changes in the party.

"The Gandhi family is the party's integrating factor and the best possible leadership option in this moment of crisis," Khurshid told PTI, countering Sibal who said it was time for the Gandhis to step aside from a leadership role and give some other person a chance.

"When did Mr Sibal fight an election to get into any position in the party," he asked in response to Sibal's remarks in an interview that the Gandhis should voluntarily move away because 'a body nominated by them will never tell them that they should not continue to hold the reins of power'.

Khurshid's staunch defence of the Gandhis comes at a time the Congress faces an existential crisis following its electoral defeats in the recent assembly elections, including in Uttar Pradesh where it won only two seats and a little over 2 per cent of the votes.

According to Khurshid, the common perception after talking to people within the party is that they would like Rahul Gandhi to take over as full-time party president.

"... we can all sincerely hope that the elections come in August, and that in August he will oblige and become president of the party again."

"We have been accustomed to a somewhat comfortable life of being in power guaranteed as it were by members of the Gandhi family over generations and we are suddenly feeling upset that they can't keep us in power for now," he added.

The former Union minister argued that internal bickering does not help the party, and instead helps the BJP.

"Leadership is in cuckoo land.... I want a 'Sab ki Congress'. Some want a 'Ghar ki Congress'," Sibal said in an interview to Indian Express.

Slamming Sibal for the barbs, Khurshid said the crowds that had gathered in support of the Gandhi family on its own accord near the AICC headquarters when the Congress Working Committee (CWC) met on Sunday must also be considered part of an inclusive Congress.

"When you talk about 'Sab ki Congress', it means an inclusive Congress," said the former Union minister, among the leaders considered close to the Gandhi family.

Referring to the CWC meeting including three members of the G-23 group who participated in a discussion reaffirming full faith in Sonia Gandhi's leadership, Khurshid said giving 'confusing signals' outside the party is not doing the party any service.

"There was a free and frank discussion in the CWC. There were issues that people who belonged to G-23 raised and they were heard with all humility and seriousness and there was a friendly exchange of views. And then they participated in that decision (reposing full faith in Sonia Gandhi's leadership)," said Khurshid, who is also a member of the CWC.

"So now if people amongst them who have been gathering together before and after the CWC, are taking a different view, then frankly it is for them to disassociate themselves or to clarify."

The damage, he said, is irreversible if you give open interviews and come out and speak publicly.

Referring to the G-23, Khurshid said if one catalogues what they have achieved and received from the party in comparison to 'some of us', the scales will be tilted towards them.

"After receiving so much, for them to complain, seems a bit sad. If things in the party have not been fine as they should be in some imagined way, they are beneficiaries of things not being fine," he said.

Khurshid also addressed the oft raised question about Rahul Gandhi's 'accessibility'.

"Of course, there are people who say he should be full time president and he should be really accessible to us the way Mrs Indira Gandhi, Mr Rajiv Gandhi were accessible to us or in previous years Sonia Ji was accessible to us. A lot of people do say he should be more accessible to us but they want him to be president," Khurshid said.

The senior Congress leader said people want Rahul Gandhi to be president but he wants to follow 'constitutional propriety'.

In another sarcastic jibe at Sibal, he said, "Is it that he was such a compelling person to become a Rajya Sabha MP that nobody could stop him, no. He was liked and he was respected and therefore he was made a Rajya Sabha MP...We must not forget the roots from where we come."

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Source: PTI  -  Edited By: Utkarsh Mishra© Copyright 2024 PTI. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of PTI content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent.
 
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