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Rediff.com  » News » Cong cracks whip on Pilot, removes him as deputy CM, PCC chief

Cong cracks whip on Pilot, removes him as deputy CM, PCC chief

Source: PTI   -  Edited By: Hemant Waje
Last updated on: July 15, 2020 04:16 IST
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The Congress on Tuesday cracked down on Sachin Pilot, stripping the dissident leader of the posts of Rajasthan's deputy chief minister and the party's state unit president and sacking two loyalists from the state cabinet.

 

Though the party seems to have the numbers for now to hang on to power in Rajasthan, the development deepens the crisis in the Congress which has lost two major states -- Karnataka and Madhya Pradesh -- over the past year.

Ministers Vishvendra Singh and Ramesh Meena were also removed from the Cabinet after a meeting of the Congress Legislature Party (CLP), its second in the last two days.

The meeting was billed as a 'second chance' for Pilot, who had turned down appeals from the party's top leadership -- including Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Gandhi -- to return to the fold.

Pilot has been upset since the Congress picked Ashok Gehlot as the chief minister after the 2018 assembly polls, while his own supporters insisted that he deserved credit for the party's victory as its state unit president.

His next move is not immediately clear. During the run-up to Tuesday's CLP meeting, his supporters insisted that he had no plans to join the Bharatiya Janata Party. They said their aim was a leadership change in Rajasthan.

'Truth can be rattled, not defeated,' Pilot tweeted in Hindi soon after he was sacked.

Gehlot accused his former deputy of playing into the hands of the BJP.

"I am very sad that horse-trading was going on," he said.

Pilot had kept away from the first CLP meeting on Monday and sources said 18 other Congress MLAs had also skipped it, giving an indication of the dissident leader's strength.

A video clip circulated by the Pilot camp appeared to show a group of 16 Congress MLAs. In a statement issued Sunday, Pilot had claimed the support of 30 Congress MLAs and 'some independents'.

The numbers are large enough to keep the Gehlot camp on edge, even if most of the 107 Congress MLAs and independents have expressed confidence in his leadership.

The state assembly has 200 MLAs and those close to Pilot are already calling for a test of strength on the floor of the House.

As soon as the meeting ended, All India Congress Committee spokesperson Randeep Surjewala announced the sacking of Pilot and the two ministers close to him from their posts.

He said Pilot enjoyed the blessings of Congress president Sonia Gandhi and was given political power at a young age. Yet, he and other ministers were trying to topple the state government as part of a 'BJP conspiracy'.

"This cannot be acceptable to any political party. Therefore, the Congress took the decision with a heavy heart," he said.

Education Minister Govind Singh Dotasara, a leader from the Other Backward Classes (OBC) is the new Pradesh Congress Committee (PCC) chief.

Tribal leader and MLA Ganesh Ghogra was appointed the new president of the state Youth Congress, a post held so far Pilot loyalist Mukesh Bhakar.

Hem Singh Shekhawat replaced another Pilot supporter, MLA Rakesh Pareek, as the state president of the Congress Sewa Dal.

Abhimanyu Poonia, the president of the state unit of the National Students Union of India (NSUI), resigned.

'We cannot work with a chief minister who has worked to send heads of Jat and Bishnoi families to jail. Our honesty and conscience is still alive,' he said on Twitter.

Ashok Gehlot met Governor Kalraj Mishra immediately after the CLP meeting, recommending the removal of the three ministers from his cabinet.

He also chaired two ministerial meetings at his home -- that of the senior ministers who for the state Cabinet, and another of the ministers of state -- where the recent developments were discussed and administrative decisions taken.

The ministers, like other Congress MLAs in the Gehlot camp, were holed up at a resort on the outskirts of the city since Monday.

Police were put on alert across the state against any fallout of the political developments.

The Bharatiya Janata Party accused Gehlot of putting the blame for the crisis on the opposition.

'Dear Ashok Gehlot, closing your eyes does not make the sun disappear. There is weakness in the structure of your house, and you are blaming the BJP national leadership for this,' party vice president Om Prakash Mathur said.

Ahead of Tuesday's meeting, Congress general secretary Avinash Pande had made another bid to reach out to the rebel leader.

'I appeal to Sachin Pilot and all his fellow MLAs to join today's Legislature Party meeting,' Pande, who is the Rajasthan in-charge at the AICC, tweeted.

The Congress has 107 MLAs and the BJP 72 in the 200-member assembly.

In the past, the ruling party has claimed the support of 13 independents, two MLAs each from the Communist Party if India-Marxist and the Bhartiya Tribal Party (BTP), and one from the Rashtriya Lok Dal (RLD).

But CPM and BTP have now indicated that their MLAs could stay neutral till the Congress settles its factional feud.

The current crisis erupted last Friday when the Rajasthan Police sent a notice to Pilot, asking him to record his statement over the alleged bid to bring down the government.

The same notice was sent to the chief minister and some other MLAs, but Pilot's supporters claimed that it was only meant to humiliate him.

The Special Operation Group (SOG) had sent out the notices after tapping a phone conversation between two men, who were allegedly discussing the fall of the Gehlot government.

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Source: PTI  -  Edited By: Hemant Waje© 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.