Many from
‘group of 23’ also backed Sonia Gandhi remaining at the helm
|
New Delhi(Agencies): A day after
being dissed at a stormy Congress Working Committee meeting over their letter
seeking urgent organisational reforms, several members of the ‘group of 23’
said on Tuesday that they were “not dissenters” but “proponents of revival”.
Many of them also backed Sonia Gandhi remaining at the helm.
The letter was not a challenge
to the leadership but a parchment of action to strengthen the party, Congress
MP Vivek Tankha said. Former Union minister Mukul Wasnik said those who saw the
letter as an “offence” will also soon realise that the issues raised are worth
consideration.
Senior Congress leader M
Veerappa Moily said it was an “admitted fact” that the organisation was not in
a position to take forward “the Congress philosophy and protect democracy”. He
also asserted that Sonia Gandhi’s leadership was always required.
The former union minister
further said the intention of the letter was to keep the party ready for the
2024 Lok Sabha polls as also for assembly and local bodies elections in the
country.
Senior Congress leader Kapil
Sibal, another signatory to the letter, posted a cryptic tweet, saying: “It’s
not about a post. It’s about my country which matters most.”
Also read: It is not about a
post, but about country, Kapil Sibal says day after stormy CWC meeting
Tankha took to Twitter to
address the controversy surrounding their letter which led to a high drama at
the CWC meet where many leaders, including former party chief Rahul Gandhi,
lashed out at the letter writers.
The CWC unanimously urged
Sonia Gandhi to continue as its interim chief till an AICC session can be
convened to start the process of electing a full-time president and authorised
her to effect necessary organisational changes to deal with the challenges
facing the party.
Sonia Gandhi was made interim
chief a year ago after Rahul Gandhi resigned from the position taking moral
responsibility for the party’s disastrous performance in the Lok Sabha
elections.
“Friends, we are not
dissenters but proponents of revival. The letter was not a challenge to
leadership but a parchment of action to strengthen the party. Universally,
truth is the best defence whether it be Court or Public Affairs. History
acknowledges the brave & not the timid (sic),” Tankha said in a tweet.
Replying to Tankha, Wasnik
tweeted: “Well said. Sooner than later those who saw the letter as an offence
will also realise that the issues raised are worth consideration.”
Senior party leader Anand
Sharma also tagged Tankha’s tweet and said: “The letter was written with the
best interest of the party in our hearts and conveying shared concerns over the
present environment in the country and sustained assault on the foundational
values of the constitution.”
Another Congress leader,
belonging to the group which wrote the letter, said they were satisfied with
the outcome of the CWC meet.
Some leaders who signed the
letter were present at the CWC meeting and agreed to the proposals, said the
leader, who wished not to be named.
“We have never expressed any
doubts on the leadership of Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi and whatever
decisions Sonia ji will take, will be acceptable to us,” the leader said.
“We are working to strengthen
the party, not working against anyone,” the leader said.
Stating that the Gandhi family
is always known for patriotism and sacrifice, Moily said Sonia Gandhi's
leadership is always required and her consent to continue as president is the
“most welcome step”.
He said Sonia Gandhi is a
“motherly figure” for the Congress and always inspired the rank and file of the
party.
“At any time of crisis, both
at the national and state level, I always stood by the national leadership of
the Congress party to preserve the unity and integrity of the party,” Moily
said, underlining that he has been in the Congress since the last 50 years
having joined under the leadership of Indira Gandhi.
Many members from the ‘group
of 23’ refused to comment on the matter officially, while some of them referred
to the CWC resolution for the inner-party issues being raised only within the
party and not in media or public fora “in the interest of propriety and
discipline”.
After the seven-hour meeting
of the party’s top decision-making body, the CWC made it clear that no one will
be permitted to undermine or weaken the party and its leadership.
Some senior Congress leaders,
including Sibal, Wasnik, Shashi Tharoor and Manish Tewari, had met at their
senior colleague Ghulam Nabi Azad's house here on Monday evening soon after the
CWC debated their letter.
Having a “full time, active
and visible” leadership, devolution of powers to state units and revamping the
CWC in line with the party constitution are some of the key suggestions made by
the 23 senior Congress leaders in the letter to Sonia Gandhi to revive the
organisation.
Sibal, who is not a part of
the CWC, had hit out at Rahul Gandhi on Twitter on Monday for a purported
remark slamming the letter writers. He withdrew his tweet a little later after
being “informed by Rahul Gandhi personally that he never said what was
attributed to him”.
The Congress also officially
denied that Rahul Gandhi had accused any party leader of “colluding with the
BJP”.
In addition to Azad, Moily,
Sibal, Sharma, Tewari, Tharoor, Wasnik and Tankha, the signatories to the
letter included P J Kurian, Renuka Chaudhary, Milind Deora, Ajay Singh, and
Jitin Prasada.
The ‘group of 23’ also
included former chief ministers Bhupinder Singh Hooda, Rajender Kaur Bhattal
and Prithviraj Chavan; former PCC chiefs Raj Babbar (UP), Arvinder Singh Lovely
(Delhi) and Kaul Singh Thakur (Himachal); current Bihar campaign chief Akhilesh
Singh, former Haryana Speaker Kuldeep Sharma; former Delhi Speaker Yoganand
Shastri and former MP Sandeep Dixit.
No comments:
Post a Comment