Kay Benedict
Forty-five years ago then Congress President S Nijalingappa led a revolt against Indira Gandhi, who was then Prime Minister, and expelled her from the party for “fostering a cult of personality”. That action was culmination of a long-drawn battle for supremacy between the old guards and Indira Gandhi.
Seniors comprising Nijalingappa, Morarji Desai, Neelam Sanjeeva Reddy and a few others who formed a ginger group called ‘Syndicate,’ were unable to stomach the style of functioning of the 52-year-old Indira, derisively dubbed ‘Goongi Gudiya.’ Consequently, in the winter of 1969 the party split with the old guards forming Congress (O). The rest, including how a crafty Indira outmanoeuvred the septuagenarians, is history. In 1998, the Congress faced another tricky situation when late Sitaram Kesri and P. V Narasimha Rao ganged up to control the party and tried to stymie a takeover by Sonia Gandhi. However, ably assisted by the powerful the Congress Working Committee mandarins, Sonia eased out Kesri, a rootless wonder, as Party President.
Circa 2014. History of sorts may not repeat for two reasons. One the Congress does not have a towering, pan-India leader to challenge the Gandhis; two, dynasty is in Congress DNA and the party has no existence sans the family.
But then, a mutiny of sorts last week by a bunch of young AICC secretaries against the old guards for covertly attacking heir apparent Rahul Gandhi, has stupefied the Congress watchers. Though the so called revolt turned out to be a storm in the tea cup, the fact that the Grand Old Party has come to such a denouement is something that should worry the leadership as well as the rank and file.
Questions are now being asked how a band of 14 obscure AICC secretaries dared to warn the seniors against going public criticising Rahul Gandhi. Their campaign ostensibly was against some senior leaders who had flayed Rahul’s style of his functioning and indirectly the Gandhi scion for the electoral debacle.
Was the secretaries’ activism orchestrated? If so, by whom? Since it is apparently a pro-Rahul crusade, it can be construed as a move propped up by Rahul himself against the old guard. If that be the case then it is unbecoming of the Congress Vice President that he needs the crutches of a few secretaries, who are much lower in the AICC pecking order, to take on the seniors. Rahul camp followers, however, claim that this group acted on its own without his knowledge or blessings. And that is why only 14 out of 42-odd secretaries signed the petition. If Rahul was behind the move he could have got all them to sign the letter.
However, what is intriguing is how these secretaries, who do not have any mass base dared to take on entrenched old guard including CWC members and general secretaries, without any fear? And why Sonia Gandhi and Rahul have been indulgent towards them? In normal times, disciplinary action could have been taken against them.
Restraining strategy
The 14 of them met in Delhi last week to chalk out a strategy to restrain the seniors some of them they believe are trying to undermine Rahul’s leadership. Subsequently, they authored a joint letter addressed to Janardan Dwivedi, general secretary in charge of organisation. The main thrust of the letter was that the seniors should be restrained from going to media to slight Rahul.
The farcical nature of the drama is underscored by the fact that before petitioning Dwivedi, some of these secretaries briefed mediapersons to vent their anger against the erring seniors. And Dwivedi, in turn, snubbed them for going to the media with an internal party matter. He, however, promptly forwarded their letter to the seniors with an advisory that they refrain from airing their views on Rahul in public.
Though Dwivedi effected a truce of sorts, the avoidable spectacle has exposed the deep disquiet within the party. It also shows that the leadership has not learned any lessons from the resounding and humiliating defeat in the Lok Sabha elections. So far, factional battles have been confined to states. Now, the scourge is spreading to the AICC, a portend that does not augur well for the party already facing multiple demons.
How will a disconnected party fight the upcoming Assembly elections in Maharashtra, Haryana (both Congress-ruled), Jammu and Kashmir and Jharkhand remains to be seen. A defeat in a key state like Maharashtra will further undermine the party and demoralise its cadre. Some in the party even suspect that the shadow boxing between pro-Rahul and old guards are a ploy to insulate the Gandhis and apportion blame for the anticipated defeats in the Assembly polls. It is baffling that instead of embarking on a serious course correction, the party men are busy belittling each other.