Congress old guard proves itself yet again
The bitter rivalry continued during campaigning with things coming to such a pass that Hooda did not even attend the two rallies by Rahul Gandhi.
New Delhi: Thursday’s Assembly poll results show that old remains gold as far as the Congress is concerned with Jat strongman Bhupinder Singh Hooda and key ally Sharad Pawar helping it garner a decent seat count in Haryana and Maharashtra.
Largely written off by the pollsters, who had predicted a tally of less than 10 seats in both states for the Congress, the proverbial old guard of the party showed its mettle.
The biggest takeaway was in Haryana where the senior Hooda and his son Deepinder had been embroiled in a bitter turf battle with then state PCC chief Ashok Tanwar. Mr Tanwar, who is seen to be a Rahul Gandhi pick, fought bitterly to save his post, but eventually was ousted when the Hoodas threatened to leave the party.
Bowing to the pressure tactic, Congress president Sonia Gandhi removed Mr Tanwar and made Dalit leader Kumari Selja the new PCC chief and Bhupinder Hooda the chief of the campaign committee as well as the legislative party leader.
After this, it was Mr Tanwar’s turn to rebel which he did by announcing his support for JJP’s Dushyant Chautala.
The bitter rivalry continued during campaigning with things coming to such a pass that Mr Hooda did not even attend the two rallies by Rahul Gandhi.
The results were though satisfactory for the Congress with Mr Hooda largely delivering with a kitty of 31 seats in an election which had earlier been seen to be a no contest.
In Maharashtra, the party adopted a completely different strategy outsourcing the entire campaign to Mr Pawar. The old war horse, an ex-Congressman, not only kept his own pocket burough of Marathwada intact, but also helped the NCP-Congress alliance breach the respectable mark of 100 seats. The veterans versus new leadership rivalry in Congress came out in the open right after the Lok Sabha polls.
Days after the reults of the general elections, Mr Gandhi had resigned as the party president owing responsibilty for the defeat. Sources say what he probably expected was that all of the top leadership would follow suit thus helping him effect a structural change. However, what it led to was a bitter turf war between the old and new leaders.
While many of Rahul Gandhi loyalists or the “new guard” quit, the old leadership largely stayed put though officially asking Mr Gandhi to continue. It was only after three months since the May 23 results that Sonia Gandhi took over as the interim chief.