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Rediff.com  » News » Dalit leader Charanjit Singh Channi is new Punjab CM

Dalit leader Charanjit Singh Channi is new Punjab CM

Source: PTI
Last updated on: September 20, 2021 09:29 IST
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The Congress on Sunday picked Charanjit Singh Channi as the next chief minister of Punjab, making him the first Dailt to hold the post in the state, a day after Amarinder Singh resigned following a bitter power tussle in the party.

 

IMAGE: Punjab CM-designate Charanjit Singh Channi submits the letter to Governor Banwarilal Purohit, at Raj Bhavan in Chandigarh on Sunday. Congress leader Harish Rawat is also seen. Photograph: PTI Photo

Channi, who met Governor Banwarilal Purohit to stake his claim to the top job in the poll-bound state soon after being elected as the leader of the Congress Legislature Party, will be sworn in on Monday morning.

Party sources said two deputy chief ministers may also take the oath to balance caste equations after the appointment of a CM from the state's Ravidassia Dalit community.

The party settled on Channi, the technical education minister in the outgoing Amarinder Singh cabinet, after a flurry of consultations through the day, following the abrupt cancellation of an 11 am meeting of the Congress Legislature Party (CLP).

Several names did the rounds over the next several hours and minister Sukhjinder Singh Randhawa appeared to be the clear frontrunner for a while.

Earlier, Congress veteran Ambika Soni told reporters in Delhi that she was offered the post but declined.

Outgoing finance minister Manpreet Singh Badal is also learnt to have backed Channi.

The Congress decision was announced on Twitter a little before 6 pm, and came as a surprise to most.

'It gives me immense pleasure to announce that Sh. #CharanjitSinghChanni has been unanimously elected as the Leader of the Congress Legislature Party of Punjab,' All India Congress Committee general secretary Harish Rawat wrote.

Channi, 58, becomes chief minister with less than six month to go before the assembly polls in Punjab.

Amarinder Singh was nudged into quitting ostensibly over his 'failure' to fulfil the promises made by the party in the 2017 assembly polls.

It is not certain that new CM will be able to accomplish the task in the time available to him, observers say.

And Navjot Singh Sidhu, recently appointed as the party's state unit president, could still be projected as the CM candidate as the elections near.

But Channi's appointment will allow the party to play the Dalit card in the elections.

An estimated 30 per cent of the state's population, counting both Sikhs and Hindus, is from that community. Its biggest concentration is in the Doaba region.

The opposition BJP had earlier announced that if voted to power in Punjab, it will make a Dalit the chief minister.

The Shiromani Akali Dal, which is fighting the polls in alliance with the Bahujan Samaj Party, has promised a Dalit deputy CM.

Sidhu tweeted, 'Historic !! Punjab's first Dalit CM-Designate... Will be written with Golden letters in History. A tribute to the spirit of the Constitution and the Congress.'

He and the party's central observers Ajay Maken and Harish Chaudhary accompanied Channi when he visited the Raj Bhavan to stake his claim to form the government.

Amarinder Singh also congratulated him. 'My best wishes to Charanjit Singh Channi. I hope he's able to keep the border state of Punjab safe and protect our people from the growing security threat from across the border,' he said.

Channi is considered close to Sidhu. Along with three other ministers -- Randhawa, Tript Rajinder Singh Bajwa and Sukhbinder Singh Sarkaria -- he has been part of the Sidhu camp in the party's divided house in Punjab.

The sniping between Amarinder Singh and Sidhu continued even after the younger leader's elevation.

For the CM, the summoning of the legislative party meeting on Saturday was the last straw.

Hours before the CLP meeting, the 'Captain' got in touch with party president Sonia Gandhi, apparently telling her that he has been 'humiliated' and will resign as CM.

In a letter to her, Singh mentioned his 'personal anguish' over the political developments in the past five months and apprehended that the high command's move might cause 'instability' in the state.

After submitting his resignation on Saturday evening, Singh also threw broad hints to the media that he would now consider his 'options'.

Apparently picking on this, Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot, who faces his own problems with dissident Sachin Pilot, advised restraint.

'I hope that Captain Amarinder Singh will not take any such step which will harm the Congress party,' he tweeted.

The leadership switch in Punjab -- and the not too smooth manner in which it was executed -- could have a bearing on Rajasthan and Chhattisgarh, the only two other states where the party is in power on its own.

"The Punjab developments are likely to have ramifications elsewhere. Dissensions within the party may get fuelled and this will weaken the party further," said a senior leader.

Party sources said the G-23, the grouping of party leaders who have sought an organisational overhaul, is also waiting in the wings to see the outcome of the changes initiated in Punjab.

Former Union minister Ashwani Kumar hoped the outgoing CM's feelings would soon be assuaged.

"The resignation of Capt Amarinder Singh was an unpleasant and difficult situation. Its ramifications are yet to unfold," he told PTI.

BJP IT department chief Amit Malviya on Sunday raked up a controversy which goes back to 2018, when an Indian Administrative Service officer alleged that Channi sent her an inappropriate text.

The party also seized on the outgoing CM's charge that Sidhu is 'anti-national'.

Senior BJP leader Prakash Javadekar termed Singh's charges 'extremely serious' and asked why Congress president Sonia Gandhi and its two other main leaders Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Gandhi Vadra are silent on this.

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