Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
India

Don't write Congress off, it will bounce back: Digvijaya

Darpan News Desk IANS, 14 May, 2014 10:42 AM
    Congress general secretary Digvijaya Singh Wednesday cautioned the media against writing off the party and asserted it would bounce back as in the past.
     
    "For god's sake, media should not write us off. We will bounce back as we did in 1977, 1989 and 1999. All political parties go through ups and downs," Digvijaya Singh told reporters here after reviewing the performance of the year-old Congress government in Karnataka.
     
    Trashing exit polls as not believable, he said they would be proved wrong as in the 2004 and 2009 elections.
     
    Exit poll surveys by various watchdogs and news channels Monday indicated that the BJP-led National Democratic Alliance would get a majority in the Lok Sabha and form the next government at the centre under its prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi.
     
    "If we (Congress) have to sit in the opposition, we will do to prevent the BJP from running amok with its communal agenda and communal politics. We also do not intend to support a Third Front because any coalition government can be formed only under the Congress leadership," Digvijaya Singh said.
     
    Explaining why Congress would not support a Third Front government, he said that such an attempt was made in the past (1996-98) and proved unsuccessful, and only a coalition government led by the Congress could be possible.
     
    Observing that winning or losing elections was part of the democratic game, Digvijaya Singh said whatever be the outcome of the polls, the party would not deviate from its ideology of socialism and secularism, which was distinct from extremism and fundamentalism of the BJP.
     
    "The BJP talks about development in its poll campaign but resorts to communal politics, disturbing the communal harmony and social fabric of the country. We will fight any attempt to divide the people whether we are in government or opposition," he said.
     
    Noting that democracy meant change, Digvijaya Singh said the party had fought the election to form the third UPA government and would do so if it got the opportunity on the basis of the poll verdict.
     
    "Whatever the result, it will have no bearing on the leadership of our vice president (Rahul Gandhi) for whom we have got great regard, respect and confidence in his leadership," he said.
     
    On the party's prospects in neighbouring Andhra Pradesh, Digvijaya Singh said the Congress was not too hopeful of winning and forming a government in Seemandhra region.
     
    "We hope to form a government in Telangana, but we are not too hopeful in Seemandhra," he said.
     
    Asked why Prime Minister Manmohan Singh did not campaign for the Lok Sabha election as much as party president Sonia Gandhi or Rahul Gandhi did, Digvijaya Singh clarified that though the prime minister was not a mass leader, he did campaign for the party in some states.
     
    "Manmohan Singhji is not a mass leader, he is a professional, an economist. He did campaign in Assam, Maharashtra, Telangana, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal."

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Arvind Kejriwal Caught Doing 'Media Fixing'

    Arvind Kejriwal Caught Doing 'Media Fixing'
    Video showing Aam Aadmi Party leader and former Chief Minister of New Delhi, Arvind Kejriwal asking TV news anchor, Punya Prasun Bajpai to highlight certain segments of his interview has gone viral on YouTube. 

    Arvind Kejriwal Caught Doing 'Media Fixing'

    Election Commission of India Orders Scrutiny of Illegal Flow of Money and Liquor in Delhi

    Election Commission of India Orders Scrutiny of Illegal Flow of Money and Liquor in Delhi
    The Election Commission (EC) in Delhi Monday directed the excise and the income-tax departments to strictly monitor the flow of illegal alcohol and flow of money in the national capital prior to the Lok Sabha polls.

    Election Commission of India Orders Scrutiny of Illegal Flow of Money and Liquor in Delhi

    2014 polls: Congress down, BJP far from Mission 272

    2014 polls: Congress down, BJP far from Mission 272
    Next month's general elections may prove to be the most significant ever because they can determine the fate of the Congress' first family.

    2014 polls: Congress down, BJP far from Mission 272

    Women's Day: Women break barriers, don the entrepreneur's cap

    Women's Day: Women break barriers, don the entrepreneur's cap
    Shravani Hagargi's parents gave her three options - continue with her studies, get married or do a regular 9-5 job. But her urge to do something for the uplifting her fellow women was stronger than her parents' command.

    Women's Day: Women break barriers, don the entrepreneur's cap

    US cosying up to Narendra Modi?

    US cosying up to Narendra Modi?
    Even as a visiting US official indicated the country's willingness to work with India's new leader post elections whoever it may be, Washington insisted there is no change in its visa policy in respect of Narendra Modi.

    US cosying up to Narendra Modi?

    Tebbit Test for Kashmiris who applaud Pakistan cricket team?

    Tebbit Test for Kashmiris who applaud Pakistan cricket team?
    Across its six columns on page one last Wednesday, The Indian Express screamed: “For ‘cheering’ Pakistan in India Match, University in Meerut suspends 67 Kashmiri students.”

    Tebbit Test for Kashmiris who applaud Pakistan cricket team?