The more things change, the more they remain the same in the Congress party
George Iype in New Delhi
Four months after he became Congress leader,
Sitaram Kesri is seen to be possessing two dangerous traits which cost his predecessor P
V Narasimha Rao his job: procrastination and an affection for sycophancy.
When he became Congress president in October, Kesri had pledged to revamp
the party and lead a crusade against corruption.
But observers say he has hardly made a difference; the morale
of the party's rank and file is still low. What is more, his resolve to fight corruption has
lost much of its sheen as he has nominated Buta Singh and
Kamal Nath -- both of whom are named in the hawala chargesheet -- for the Lok
Sabha bye-elections.
And the zeal with which he is carrying out a campaign to
oust Rao loyalists from the organisation and induct his loyalists in key positions has
alarmed many Congress leaders.
Many fear Kesri is treading the same indecisive path travelled by Rao in revamping
the party.
As soon he was made Congress president, Kesri promised to
nominate members to the Congress Parliamentary Board, the body that shortlists
and decides candidates for all -- state and general -- elections.
But the CPB was never constituted. Instead, for next week's assembly election in
Punjab an ad hoc committee headed by Kesri selected candidates. The result: The
Congress is on the verge of losing the poll thanks to gross indiscipline in the
state party unit.
In a stunning development last weekend, former Punjab chief minister Harcharan Singh Brar
was expelled from the party for six years without even issuing him a show cause notice.
His crime: Brar had withdrawn from the electoral fray without seeking the party leadership's
sanction to do so.
Rao loyalist Maninderjit Singh Bitta, the former Youth Congress leader, was served
with a show cause notice the same day to explain why he had not filed his
nomination papers for the Punjab poll. Bitta claimed at a press conference in Jalandhar
on Wednesday that Kesri had promised him in a telephone conversation on Tuesday that
the notice would be withdrawn.
"Kesri has slipped into a Rao-like mindset and he is all set to induct
sycophants in the party," feels a Congress leader from South
India, speaking on condition of anonymity.
"In the new dispensation in the Congress," the South Indian leader added, "the party can
neither grow nor it could be revamped."
There are a host of party appointments that Kesri has been delaying for
several weeks now. He is yet to appoint the party's chief whips and deputy leaders
in the two Houses of Parliament. Two vacancies in the Congress Working Committee
are yet to be filled up.
Former Congress heavyweights Arjun Singh and Narain Dutt Tiwari, who returned to the
party fold three weeks back, have been left in the lurch as Kesri is
not in favour of inducting them into the CWC.
After the debacle in last year's general election, many senior leaders had advocated the removal of party chiefs in Bihar, Delhi, Haryana, Maharashtra, Orissa, Tamil Nadu and Uttar
Pradesh. No changes have yet taken place.
Kesri's associates say he is not in a mood to revamp the party as he
fears it will result in rebellion. Earlier this month, Kesri's anointment of
Maharashtra leader Sharad Pawar as the party's leader in the Lok Sabha disappointed senior
leaders K Karunakaran, Kotla Vijaya Bhaskar Reddy and G Venkataswamy who feel slighted
that they have not been rewarded despite their support to him during the Congress Parliamentary Party
leadership crisis.
His unity moves have also come unstuck with the Tamil Maanila
Congress, the major Congress breakaway faction, publicly stating that it is not in a
mood to return to the parent party. "The TMC's invitation to the Congress to join the
United Front government has embarrassed Kesri," a senior Congress leader told
Rediff On The NeT.
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