Kesri's decision takes senior Congress leaders like Pawar by surprise
Several senior Congress leaders were
taken by surprise by the party's sudden withdrawal of support to
the Deve Gowda government, while state party units welcomed
party chief Sitaram Kesri's decision.
"Would I have been in Pune if I had known of this?" asked Sharad Pawar,
leader of the Congress in the Lok Sabha and arguably the most influential
leader in the party after Kesri. Pawar said the decision has come as
a ''bolt from the blue'' to him.
''I will have to talk to the Congress president and other party
colleagues and understand from them the real reasons for withdrawal
so suddenly. It is only after that I would be able to make any
comment on the matter,'' he added.
Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Digvijay Singh, the
only Congress CM of a major state,
described it as a surprise development. ''It is not proper to
comment on it before going into the details,'' he said.
In Pune, Suresh Kalmadi, who till recently was the spokesman
of the Congress Parliamentary Party, expressed surprise over the
party's decision. ''I am quite surprised at Mr
Kesri's decision announcing the withdrawal of
support to the UF government," he said.
Kalmadi said the Congress president at the last CPP meeting had
assured members of Parliament that they would be taken into
confidence before any decision on the withdrawal of support to the
government was taken.
Former Union minister and rebel Congress leader Jagannath Mishra
told reporters in Patna that the party decision to withdraw support from the
Deve Gowda government ''has been taken in
'haste''.
Dr Mishra said the CPP was not taken
into confidence for such an important decision. ''Although the
decision to withdraw support is correct, we should have found
out the alternative,'' he said.
''The Congress has not been given the mandate to rule and it
should not indulge in manipulation to form the government,''
Mishra said.
At Pune, Congress spokesman V N Gadgil welcomed the
decision to withdraw support and stake a claim to
form the government.
''The decision has not come as a surprise to me as I was
expecting it. I was expecting something of this sort to happen
during April, but it has come sooner,'' he added.
In Thiruvananthanpuram, Congress Working Committee member
A K Antony
said the Congress had no choice but to withdraw support to the United
Front as all efforts made by it so far to correct the
government's functioning did not yield the desired results.
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