Madhya Pradesh

Factionalism, expected influx of BJP leaders delays Cong’s 1st l for MP polls

The Congress party is unlikely to release an early l of candidates for the upcoming Madhya Pradesh Assembly elections due for November as it might lead to further factionalism and derail the plans to induct some important BJP leaders, senior party leaders have said. (Representative Photo) A senior Congress leader familiar with the discussions in the party over ticket dribution said that announcing the candidates early can increase factionalism within the party as there may not be consensus on one name. “It’s difficult to get consent of all the factions on a single name until and unless there is intervention from the party high command,” said the leader. Although the party has not publicly named any candidates, it has identified 106 candidates in the state, who have been asked to start campaign. However, a few leaders, including Suresh Pachauri, Arun Yadav and former state miner Ajay Singh have expressed discontent over not being part of different election committees making decisions on the selection of candidates and keeping them away from the party functions. They are also unhappy over being side-lined MP Congress president Kamal Nath over running of the party in the state. Another senior Congress leader said Arun Yadav was visibly more upset due to the nomination of Kamleshwar Patel, another OBC face, in the party’s highest decision-making body– the Congress Working Committee (CWC). The Working Committee was reconstituted on July 20, with at least 22 new faces in the panel. Son of former deputy chief miner late Subhash Yadav, Arun Yadav has been side-lined since Kamal Nath replaced him as the state Congress president on May 1, 2018, said the leader mentioned above wishing not to be named. Similarly, former state miner Ajay Singh and former Union miner Suresh Pachauri also feel marginalised in the party affairs and the trigger was their names not being there in the screening committee for selecting candidates, a third Congress leader said. As the refused to participate in party functions and restricted themselves to their assembly constituencies, the party in a bid to placate them including their names as the special invitees in the party’s Election Screening Committee. Another party leader said that apart from factionalism, there is a view within the party that announcing candidates early could prevent more Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leaders from joining the Congress ahead of the polls, especially in constituencies where the candidates are officially announced. “As the election heats picks up in October, we expect many BJP leaders to join. And, therefore, the party will announce candidates at the right time,” the third leader said. Prominent leaders from the ruling party who have switched over to the Congress so far include sitting MLA Birendra Rahuvanshi, former miner Deepak Joshi, former MLA Bhanwar Singh Shekhawat and Chandra Bhushan Singh Bundela. The BJP leaders’ embracing the Congress along with hundreds of their followers created a conducive atmosphere for the party across the state whether or not these leaders were going to get party tickets for the elections. “Congress will announce its l at the right time after taking into consideration all the aspects related to the candidates,” said state Congress spokesperson KK Mishra. He added that the BJP had to announce its first l in a hurry to check a chaos-like situation in the party over the fact that it was going to lose the election badly. The BJP announced its first l of 39 candidates on August 17 for seats which it did not win in 2018 resulting in its losing majority in the Assembly. “Congress leaders are gripped with fear that if they go ahead with making the l public there will be rebellion in the party. Congress is anyway going to lose the election. Its l or no-l will not make any impact on the BJP’s prospects,” state BJP spokesperson Narendra Saluja said. The state elections are scheduled for November to elect all 230 members of the Madhya Pradesh Legislative Assembly. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Ranjan Srivastava leads HT’s coverage from Bhopal. He has spent more than two decades in journalism in Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, covering political and other affairs. For the past 16 years, he has been working in Madhya Pradesh. …view detail

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