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| CONGRESS Cosmetic Changes The much-awaited revamp of the party by Sonia turns out to be mere window-dressing. By Harish Gupta
It was a swap between tweedledum and tweedledee, except for the induction of Sangma, the former Lok Sabha Speaker. Sonia left untouched the five general-secretaries of the All-India Congress Committee (AICC), including R.K. Dhawan and Oscar Fernandes, both defeated in the last polls. Contrary to expectations, she did not use her formidable support in the party to jettison the 10 elected CWC members. "The elected members would have resigned," says a party insider, "if Sonia wanted them to." Even Sitaram Kesri was retained as a permanent invitee to the committee. Pranab Mukherjee, who fancies himself as the party's "economist laureate", was somewhat downsized with Manmohan Singh's appointment. Aiyar's induction into the secretariat, after a bad courtship with Mamata Banerjee's Trinamool Congress, was a tribute paid by Sonia to her late husband's friend-cum-follower. Closeness to Rajiv also holds the key to the elevation of Natwar Singh, Jogi and Khursheed. However, the changes do not offer a clue to how Sonia is planning to gear her party to face the assembly elections due this year. Leader of the Opposition in Parliament and CWC member Sharad Pawar says, "The party's litmus test will be in Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Delhi." Assembly elections are scheduled to take place in these states in October-November. He says there is a possibility that states like Bihar, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh may also go to polls. Is the Congress president giving the right signals by dumping two Congress chief ministers from the party's apex body at this stage? Besides, the entry into the CWC of Pilot -- author of a report that blames Arjun Singh and Madhya Pradesh chief minister Digvijay Singh for the party's lack-lustre performance in Madhya Pradesh -- changes the Congress' power equations in the state. The trouble with the Congress under Sonia is that it remains as hamstrung as earlier by the lack of a clear political agenda. The party will continue to go under unless it realises that it is more important to find new issues than getting new executives. In the "litmus test" of the assembly elections, it may then show up only the wrong colours. |
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