Congress, UF leaders battle over coordination committee
George Iype in New Delhi
One day after Prime Minister Inder Kumar Gujral won the confidence vote in
Parliament, his United Front coalition partners and the Congress party have
already begun fighting over the terms and conditions of the proposed coordination
committee.
Setting up a ten member coordination panel for a constant dialogue on
crucial policy issues between Congress and the Front was a pre-condition imposed
by President Shankar Dayal Sharma before the installation of the new UF
government.
The super committee consisting of five members each from the Congress and the UF,
to be headed by Congress president Sitaram Kesri and Gujral has not yet
been formed.
But fissures have surfaced among UF partners and Congress leaders over the
nature and jurisdiction of the committee.
Congressmen want the Gujral regime to regularly apprise the committee of
all government policies, contentious national issues, major official
announcements, even the law and order situation in the country.
According to Santosh Mohan Deb, the Congress chief whip in Lok Sabha, his party
does not want the coordination committee to remain "a toothless tiger."
"It should be an apex body where the prime minister and other members should
freely discuss with the Congress members all important government
initiatives," he said.
Deb told Rediff On The NeT that the panel should also take into
consideration the Congress party's recommendations which might be necessary
on many economic, social and secular programmes.
"Our effort is to ensure that the new UF coalition runs smoothly and
effectively," said the Congress leader, adding that his party will "not poke
its nose" into the day-to-day administration of the Gujral government.
But the UF constituents, particularly the Left parties, have staunchly
opposed the demands of the Congress.
A senior UF leader said the coalition partners want the coordination
committee to be united, where the Congress and the government can discuss
important legislation and major policy initiatives.
"But our government will be unable to comply if the Congress members demand
to reveal the contents of, for instance the Bofors investigation, half way
through," he told Rediff On The NeT.
Left parties are similarly worried that Kesri will virtually run the
government if the coordination panel is empowered to discuss the A to Z of
administrative decisions. Left leaders also fear the new panel will
undermine the importance of the existing UF steering committee.
"The coordination committee should be strictly restricted to debating issues
of national importance and not a platform to discuss the government's
administrative decisions," Somnath Chatterjee, the Communist Party of
India-Marxist leader in the Lok Sabha, told Rediff On The NeT.
"The Congress leadership should not think the committee is a
mechanism to take over the reins of the country from the UF government,"
the CPI-M leader warned.
While the committee is yet to take shape, hectic lobbying is on among UF
and Congress leaders to get onto the coveted panel.
Congress leaders vying for their inclusion in the committee
include Sharad Pawar, K Karunakaran, Ghulam Nabi Azad, Santosh Mohan Deb, V
Narayanaswamy and Priya Ranjan Dasmunshi.
UF leaders pitching for a place in the panel include Ram Vilas
Paswan, Srikant Jena, Murasoli Maran, Mulayam Singh Yadav and C M Ibrahim.
The committee is expected to be constituted before the Budget session
of Parliament resumes on Wednesday, April 30.
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