Close X
Monday, October 7, 2024
ADVT 
India

Congress will again back AAP if needed: Dikshit

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Jan, 2015 05:14 PM
    The Congress was ready to support an AAP government again in the event of a hung assembly in the capital, former chief minister Sheila Dikshit said Thursday.
     
    "It is logical that we would want a stable government, and if the need arises, the AAP will be our choice to keep communal forces at bay," Dikshit told IANS.
     
    Aam Aadmi Party chief Arvind Kejriwal was quick to react, saying "it means the Congress has already conceded and people should vote for the AAP instead of the Congress."
     
    Congress' political in charge of Delhi P.C. Chacko described Dikshit's remarks as "her imagination which has nothing to do with the party".
     
    "Whosoever has said that doesn't matter. There is no question of supporting the AAP," Chacko told IANS.
     
    After winning just eight seats in the 2013 election that ended 15 years of its rule in Delhi, the Congress propped up a minority government of the AAP headed by Kejriwal.
     
    Dikshit, a three-time chief minister, was defeated in New Delhi constituency by Kejriwal by nearly 26,000 votes.
     
    Kejriwal resigned in February 2014 after just 49 days in office over the stalling of an anti-graft bill in the Delhi assembly. The Bharatiya Janata Party had then finished as the single largest party but declined to form a government.
     
    Former AAP minister Manish Sisodia told IANS that he did not expect the Congress to win even one of the 70 seats.
     
    "In any case, we are confident of coming to power on our own," he said.
     
    The assembly polls are likely to be held in February. Political parties have already started campaigning.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Army chief denies Chinese incursion into India

    Army chief denies Chinese incursion into India
    Reports Tuesday said the Chinese troops entered 25 to 30 km into Indian territory in the Burtse area of north Ladakh, pitched tents and held up flags that read...

    Army chief denies Chinese incursion into India

    Kashmir not an internal issue: Separatist leader

    Kashmir not an internal issue: Separatist leader
    Separatist leader Syed Ali Shah Geelani Tuesday said Kashmir is an international issue and not an internal issue of India...

    Kashmir not an internal issue: Separatist leader

    Modi invites suggestions on new institution

    Modi invites suggestions on new institution
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi Tuesday invited suggestions on the new institution that would replace Planning Commission through a special...

    Modi invites suggestions on new institution

    India calls off talks with Pakistan

    India calls off talks with Pakistan
    India Monday called off the foreign secretary level talks with Pakistan scheduled for Aug 25 after the latter's high commissioner Abdul...

    India calls off talks with Pakistan

    Modi must adopt painful reforms to push growth: Chinese daily

    Modi must adopt painful reforms to push growth: Chinese daily
    To maintain high growth rate in India in a sustainable way, Prime Minister Narendra Modi must adopt some painful reforms, such as the...

    Modi must adopt painful reforms to push growth: Chinese daily

    NY sheriff: Couple charged with kidnapping 2 Amish sisters may have planned other abductions

    NY sheriff: Couple charged with kidnapping 2 Amish sisters may have planned other abductions
    CANTON, N.Y. - A couple accused of kidnapping two young Amish sisters were prowling for easy targets and may have also planned to abduct other children, a sheriff said Saturday.

    NY sheriff: Couple charged with kidnapping 2 Amish sisters may have planned other abductions