Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
India

Manpreet Badal Merges His Party With Congress Unconditionally

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 Jan, 2016 11:06 AM
    Manpreet Singh Badal, an estranged nephew of Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal, on Friday merged his People's Party of Punjab with the Congress to unitedly take on SAD-BJP in the assembly polls in the state early next year.
     
    The merger was announced at the Congress headquarters here in presence of Punjab Congress chief Amarinder Singh and party leaders Shakeel Ahmed, Ambika Soni and Partap Singh Bajwa. 
     
    Amarinder Singh, who will lead the party's campaign in the state, said the Congress had lost the last two assembly polls by a very slender margin and the party was working towards alliances. 
     
    He identified the Left parties and the Bahujan Samaj Party as potential allies, saying that merger of the PPP had been concluded. 
     
    "We are very happy. Manpreet Badal has merged his party with us... Hope we will be able to forge a strong alliance for the election," he said, adding Manpreet Badal underplays his position but he has a pan-Punjab image and his party was present in all districts.
     
    Manpreet Badal said his party was merging with the Congress unconditionally. 
     
    Noting that he had been the youngest legislator and youngest finance minister in Punjab, he said he had parted ways with the Shiromani Akali Dal-led government in 2010 following differences with its leadership and had floated a new party in 2011. 
     
    He said that Punjab was once the leading states of the country but had badly lost its position.
     
    Manpreet Badal, who fought the 2014 Lok Sabha election as a Congress candidate from Bathinda against Harsimrat Kaur Badal, the wife of his first cousin and Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal, and lost narrowly, said that merger talks had been in the works for some months. 
     
     
    He said he met Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi thrice and his emphasis was "on agenda of Punjab".
     
    "How will you turnover Punjab, that was the agenda. We submitted a 11-point memorandum and the Congress accepted it and said it was it” own agenda also," said Manpreet Badal. 
     
    "We felt Congress will be good, right and only platform. We were treated with a lot of respect. They won our hearts," he added. 
     
    Elaborating on the agenda, he said putting an end to drug menace was the top priority.
     
    The agenda also includes a "decisive end to VIP, VVIP, VVVIP culture in the state", removing nepotism and favouritism in government, bringing agriculture to the forefront, check rapid decline in state's finances, zero-tolerance for corruption, transparent recruitments and ending stranglehold of a few individuals and families on state's "natural resources".
     
    Asked why PPP did not join hands with the Aam Aadmi Party, Manpreet Badal said that "they do not have a blueprint to turn around Punjab".
     
    "We felt Congress is a bigger, better, more experienced platform. Our effort will be to form a Congress government," he said.
     
    He also expressed happiness over Congress commitment to quickly put an end to the drug menace in the state. 
     
    The PPP earlier formed an alliance with the Left and other smaller parties under the banner of 'Sanjha Morcha' just before the January 2012 assembly elections in Punjab but none of them won any seat.
     
    However, the PPP garnered a six percent vote share, playing a spoilsport for the Congress that ended up with 46 seats as against 56 of the Shiromani Akali Dal and 12 of the Bharatiya Janata Party. Three seats in the 117-member assembly were won by Independents. 
     
     
    The Congress and the PPP had subsequently announced an alliance in March 2014 for elections to the state's 13 Lok Sabha seats.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Why Chandigarh's International Airport Remains A Domestic One

    Why Chandigarh's International Airport Remains A Domestic One
    The Chandigarh International Airport project, which was to connect the 'City Beautiful' to destinations like Dubai and other places like Bangkok, has not taken off and the city is unlikely to see any international flight in the near future.

    Why Chandigarh's International Airport Remains A Domestic One

    Delhi Trapped In Smog As World Urged To Act On Climate Change

    Delhi Trapped In Smog As World Urged To Act On Climate Change
    The Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) defines an AQI between levels 0-50 as "good" quality of air, 51-100 as "satisfactory", 301-400 means "very poor" and 401-500 is "severe".

    Delhi Trapped In Smog As World Urged To Act On Climate Change

    Arvind Kejriwal Says Will Implement Hazare's Lokpal Suggestions

    Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal on Tuesday thanked Anna Hazare for supporting the Delhi Jan Lokpal Bill, saying he will "surely" implement the changes proposed by the social activist.

    Arvind Kejriwal Says Will Implement Hazare's Lokpal Suggestions

    Amid Sparks, Rajnath Says Intolerance Won't Be Allowed

    Rajnath Singh, who wound up a two-day debate in the Lok Sabha, reached out to the opposition and promised that mistakes if any would be rectified by the government.

    Amid Sparks, Rajnath Says Intolerance Won't Be Allowed

    Uproar In Lok Sabha Over Salim's Remarks; Rajnath Says Deeply Hurt

    Uproar In Lok Sabha Over Salim's Remarks; Rajnath Says Deeply Hurt
    A remark attributed to Home Minister Rajnath Singh by CPI-M member Mohammad Salim during the debate on intolerance triggered turmoil in the Lok Sabha on Monday.

    Uproar In Lok Sabha Over Salim's Remarks; Rajnath Says Deeply Hurt

    Rushdie Book Was Not Banned: Congress

    Days after former finance minister P. Chidambaram's criticised the ban on Salman Rushdie's controversial novel "The Satanic Verses", the Congress on Monday noted only the book's import had been banned.

    Rushdie Book Was Not Banned: Congress