Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
India

Criticism mounts in Congress at 'Team Rahul'

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 22 May, 2014 01:24 PM
    Voices are growing in the Congress over the role of "Team Rahul" in the Lok Sabha elections with suggestions that the aides of vice president Rahul Gandhi could not read the ground realities.
     
    Party leaders have begun giving vent to their feelings after the party's debacle in the Lok Sabha polls.
     
    However, the criticism is not targeted directly at Rahul Gandhi, who led the party's campaign, but his team which aided him in campaign planning and strategy.
     
    Former union minister Milind Deora, who said that Gandhi's advisers did not have their ears to the ground, stuck to his remarks Thursday but noted that his remarks were expressed out of "deep loyalty" and "pain".
     
    "My comments are out of emotions of deep loyalty to the party, pain of our performance & a sincere desire to see us bounce back. Nothing more," Deora tweeted.
     
    "Field party work & electoral battles are key to comprehend ground realities. This should form the basis for leadership posts in the Congress," he wrote in another tweet.
     
    Deora said there were strong murmurs in the party that people who were calling the shots did not have electoral experience, status, standing and credibility in the party. 
     
    Deora, who did not take names during an interview to a national daily, also made a veiled criticism of Gandhi, saying that those who "take the advice also have to bear responsibility".
     
    Former Congress MP Priya Dutt Thursday said a "bigger role" in the party organisation should only be given to "elected representatives".
     
    "The Congress governments at the centre did a lot for the welfare of the people but we could not project our achievements or communicate them well," she said.
     
    Dutt acknowledged there was disconnect between the party and the people at the grass root level. "We need to check that and take corrective measures," she said.
     
    Both Dutt and Deora lost their Lok Sabha election.
     
    Party workers have also been complaining that there was lack of avenues in the party to voice their opinions to the top leaders. 
     
    Bharatiya Janata Party spokesperson Nirmala Sitharaman refused to comment on the controversy, saying it was an "internal matter" of the Congress.
     
    The Congress won just 44 seats in the Lok Sabha polls.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    BJP alleges graft in Vadra deals, Priyanka Gandhi hits back

    BJP alleges graft in Vadra deals, Priyanka Gandhi hits back
    The verbal spat between the Congress and the BJP grew more strident Sunday with the BJP's allegations of "corruption under patronage" in land deals of Congress chief Sonia Gandhi's son-in-law Robert Vadra evoked a spirited response from his wife Priyanka Gandhi, who accused the party of "running like bewildered rats".

    BJP alleges graft in Vadra deals, Priyanka Gandhi hits back

    Varanasi battle to save the country: Arvind Kejriwal

    Varanasi battle to save the country: Arvind Kejriwal
    AAP chief Arvind Kejriwal said that his fight against BJP prime ministerial nominee Narendra Modi is not a "battle of prestige" but one to save the country from corrupt forces.

    Varanasi battle to save the country: Arvind Kejriwal

    For Rahul, poverty is a matter of fun: Modi

    For Rahul, poverty is a matter of fun: Modi
    Ridiculing Rahul Gandhi, BJP's prime ministerial nominee Narendra Modi Sunday said that for the Congress vice president, poverty was a "matter of fun" as he had never experienced any such thing in his life.

    For Rahul, poverty is a matter of fun: Modi

    Punjab Congress president proposes death penalty for drug smugglers

    Punjab Congress president proposes death penalty for drug smugglers
     Punjab Congress president Pratap Singh Bajwa Sunday said that he would bring in a legislation proposing death penalty for those indulging in drugs trade.

    Punjab Congress president proposes death penalty for drug smugglers

    Kashmir will not remain part of a communal India: Farooq Abdullah

    Kashmir will not remain part of a communal India: Farooq Abdullah
    National Conference (NC) patron and Srinagar Lok Sabha candidate Farooq Abdullah said Sunday that Jammu and Kashmir would not remain a part of India if the country becomes communal, while asking those who vote for Narendra Modi to "drown themselves".

    Kashmir will not remain part of a communal India: Farooq Abdullah

    Army chief's appointment: Need for restraint and consensus

    Army chief's appointment: Need for restraint and consensus
    Even as India is going through the last phase of a critical and intensely contested general election, which hopefully will lead to a new government in Delhi by late May, the appointment of a new army chief to succeed General Bikram Singh who retires on July 31 has become the focus of a potentially damaging controversy

    Army chief's appointment: Need for restraint and consensus