Congress prepares to withdraw support to United Front soon
George Iype in New Delhi
Taken aback by the pressure tactics used by the United Front
government to browbeat
its leaders, a belligerent Congress party now plans
to withdraw support to Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda much earlier
than it had wanted to.
While senior Congress leaders
have begun informal consultations to work out a strategy for bringing
down the UF government,
many Janata Dal MPs's disenchantment with Deve Gowda's leadership
has brought cheers to the Congress camp.
The immediate provocation
for the Congress to consider severing its ties with the
13-party coalition government is the interrogation
of Congress president Sitaram Kesri by the Central Bureau of Investigation on Sunday.
Congress leaders have
alleged that the order to probe assets and property owned by Kesri
and members of his family came from the Prime Minister's Office.
The PMO on Tuesday denied the Congress charge,
but the issue continues to vitiate the already tense Congress-UF relationship.
Other issues that have
created a rift between the Congress and the Front
are the government's inability to curb inflation and the ambiguity
of its foreign investment policies.
The Congress Parliamentary Party will meet
on Friday, January 24, to chalk out a UF-bashing plan.
"We can not sit idle
when the Prime Minister's Office is using the government investigative
machinery to implicate Kesriji in false cases,"
Congress MP Priya Ranjan Dasmunshi told Rediff On The NeT.
"It is demeaning
that the Congress-supported government is resorting to cheap political
tactics," he added.
Though the CPP meeting is being convened to discuss the government's
economic performance, Dasmunshi said it will "debate the crucial support
that we have given Deve Gowda."
Sources in the Congress
also revealed that several constituents of the Front and a section
of Janata Dal MPs are suspicious of the prime minister's alleged
tendency to fix anyone who is a potential threat to his
government's survival.
A senior Congress leader told rediff On The NeT
that "if Deve Gowda goes ahead with his anti-Congress onslaught, the
Congress leadership will be compelled to lure JD president and
Bihar Chief Minister Laloo Prasad Yadav to break away from the Front
and support a Congress-led government."
"Kesri and Laloo Yadav" he claimed, "are good friends and they can turn the
tables against Deve Gowda."
The Bihar chief minister
has been unhappy with the prime minister for some months now. That tenuous
relationship deteriorated further when the CBI interrogated Laoo Yadav in the
Rs 10 billion animal fodder scam last fortnight. The Congress hopes
it can rope in the 22 JD MPs from Bihar, many of whom are said to
be quite close to Laloo Yadav, if the plan to install a Kesri-led
government takes shape.
The Congress's strained relations
with the UF government figured prominently during discussions
Kesri has had with senior party leaders K Karunakaran,
Ahmed Patel, Sharad Pawar and Dr Manmohan Singh in recent days.
The Congress is also planning to attack the government's
proposed hike in petroleum products and sugar prices. Though the
Deve Gowda government plans to present a pro-poor
Budget this year,
the Congress does not want to share the blame for a Budget which
it expects will lead to inflation.
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