TMC leaders displeased by Veerendrakumar's appointment as Chidambaram deputy
N Sathiya Moorthy in Madras
It has gone mostly unnoticed elsewhere, but the Tamil Maanila
Congress feels distinctly uncomfortable over the induction of
Janata Dal leader M P Veerendrakumar as Union minister of
state for finance. Party sources see it
as an attempt by Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda to bridle Finance Minister
Palaniappan Chidambaram, and to keep the TMC leadership
on the 'right path' should they seek political adventurism.
Suave, calculative and ambitious, Veerendrakumar is seen as Deve
Gowda's answer to Chidambaram, given the fact that the prime minister's
hands are otherwise tied in a coalition of the United Front variety.
Not many in the TMC has any idea about the man except that Veerendrakumar
is one of the richest coffee planters in Kerala with an MBA from the USA.
A Lohiaite by conviction, he is a friend of the ruling Left Front
in his state, controls Mathrubhoomi, the second highest-selling
Malayalam daily and beat The Times of India group in its attempt
to take over the newspaper. Though a minuscule minority in political
terms, the Janata Dal in Kerala is under his thumb, Veerendrakumar
having sidelined old war-horses like K Chandrasekharan and
Arangil Sreedharan in recent times.
If he had not been considered for a ministerial berth by Gowda
earlier, it was only because he was seen as a friend of former
Karnataka chief minister and the prime minister's bete noire,
Ramakrishna Hegde. He has since moved
away from the Hegde camp, and becomes the first Keralite representative
in the United Front government.
"This being his background, there is enough reason to suspect
the motives behind Veerendrakumar's induction," says a TMC
source. "Sections within the United Front and also sections
within the industry are not happy with Chidambaram,
and Veerendrakumar's induction as a junior minister of finance
could only keep these groups happy."
Detractors of the TMC also expect Deve Gowda to use Veeerendrakumar
to get at the bottom of the Indian Bank scam, in which some
party leaders are said to be involved. "Like P V Narasimha
Rao, Deve Gowda too has made corruption and cleanliness in public
life, his political hobby-horse. The Indian Bank scam, if there
is any truth in the varied allegations, could come in handy for
him," says a source in the non-TMC camp.
In this context, the TMC source refers to Deve Gowda's continued
suspicion of the party when it comes to supporting the government
in crucial times. "He is obviously under the illusion that
we may still team up with the Congress if the latter decides to
stake its claim in forming a government after ousting the United
Front regime."
Obviously again, adds this source, "Deve Gowda has not understood
the mood of the TMC cadres and the public in the state. We cannot
merge with the Congress. Nor is our leadership interested in frittering
away an opportunity to try and form
a government of our own in the
state in coming years."
According to this source, it's Deve Gowda's fears and his consequent
actions that could force the TMC's hand, if at all, not
the other way round.
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