Tag: Ghulam Nabi Azad

  • Congress Working Committee to meet today as Azad’s exit rocks party 

    By Online Desk

    The Congress Working Committee meeting is to be held at 3.30 pm on Sunday in virtual mode. 

    The meeting is expected to have discussions on the final schedule for the election of Congress President. The move comes in the backdrop of the resignation of the senior Congress leader and party veteran Ghulam Nabi Azad on Friday and his letter to party president Sonia Gandhi in which he lashed out at Rahul Gandhi for “demolishing the party’s entire consultative mechanism”. 

    The Congress Working Committee’s meeting might witness the discussion on the issues of Ghulam Nabi Azad’s resignation, the final schedule for the election of the party President and other internal issues with the party.

    Sources also said besides this, it could also express confidence in the leadership provided by Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi.

    According to sources, it is said that Anand Sharma and Ghulam Nabi Azad spoke for more than an hour on Saturday after the former wrote a letter to Congress president Sonia Gandhi.  

    Earlier, Congress leader Sachin Pilot said the leader has quit Congress when the party was preparing to take on the misgovernance of the BJP government. 

    The Congress, dealing with the fallout of a series of high-profile exits, including that of Kapil Sibal and Ashwani Kumar, attempted to deflect the latest blow by alleging that Azad’s DNA had been “Modi-fied” and linking his resignation to the end of his Rajya Sabha tenure.

    The Congress had announced in October last year that the election of the new party president will be held between August 21 and September 20 this year.

    Sources had also said the election of the Congress president is likely to be delayed by a few weeks with the party focused on the Kanyakumari to Kashmir ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’ starting September 7 and some state units not completing formalities.

    With Sonia Gandhi abroad for medical checkups and Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Gandhi Vadra accompanying her, they will join the CWC meeting virtually.

    (With inputs from agencies)

    The Congress Working Committee meeting is to be held at 3.30 pm on Sunday in virtual mode. 

    The meeting is expected to have discussions on the final schedule for the election of Congress President. The move comes in the backdrop of the resignation of the senior Congress leader and party veteran Ghulam Nabi Azad on Friday and his letter to party president Sonia Gandhi in which he lashed out at Rahul Gandhi for “demolishing the party’s entire consultative mechanism”. 

    The Congress Working Committee’s meeting might witness the discussion on the issues of Ghulam Nabi Azad’s resignation, the final schedule for the election of the party President and other internal issues with the party.

    Sources also said besides this, it could also express confidence in the leadership provided by Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi.

    According to sources, it is said that Anand Sharma and Ghulam Nabi Azad spoke for more than an hour on Saturday after the former wrote a letter to Congress president Sonia Gandhi.  

    Earlier, Congress leader Sachin Pilot said the leader has quit Congress when the party was preparing to take on the misgovernance of the BJP government. 

    The Congress, dealing with the fallout of a series of high-profile exits, including that of Kapil Sibal and Ashwani Kumar, attempted to deflect the latest blow by alleging that Azad’s DNA had been “Modi-fied” and linking his resignation to the end of his Rajya Sabha tenure.

    The Congress had announced in October last year that the election of the new party president will be held between August 21 and September 20 this year.

    Sources had also said the election of the Congress president is likely to be delayed by a few weeks with the party focused on the Kanyakumari to Kashmir ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’ starting September 7 and some state units not completing formalities.

    With Sonia Gandhi abroad for medical checkups and Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Gandhi Vadra accompanying her, they will join the CWC meeting virtually.

    (With inputs from agencies)

  • Azad’s resignation shows ‘lack of internal democracy’ in Congress: BJP’s Jitendra Singh 

    By PTI

    JAMMU: Union Minister Jitendra Singh on Saturday said Ghulam Nabi Azad’s resignation from Congress was an internal matter of the party, even though it showed ‘lack of internal democracy’ in the party.

    He said BJP is the only option left in the country with its democratic values.

    “It is an internal matter of Congress but as a responsible citizen of a democratic country, one expects that there should be internal democracy in every party, just as we follow the democratic values,” Singh, the minister of state in the Prime Minister’s office, said here on Azad’s resignation.

    “If internal democracy is not followed in the party, then it is a cause of concern for its leaders and they should think over it,” he said.

    The minister said a recent survey has put Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the top of the list of the ‘most popular world leaders with an approval rating of 75 per cent and Congress too should be proud of the fact.

    “BJP is the only option left in the country. Modi is not only popular in the country but a recent survey at the international level put him at the top spot once again, which is a proud moment for all of us. Congress should also be proud of it as an Indian leader has emerged as the most popular leader at the global level,” he said.

    Asked whether BJP will welcome Azad in its fold, he said it is up to him to decide his next course of action. “It will be his decision what to do next.”

    On the timing of Assembly elections in Jammu and Kashmir, he said it is the prerogative of the Election commission of India to decide the date of the polls and BJP has no role in it.

    Earlier, addressing a seminar on ‘waste to wealth’ organised under ‘Ek Kaam Desh Ke Naam’ programme here, he said there is a need to create awareness about several waste products which can help people generate income with little effort.

    He said cooked oil from kitchens could be sold at about Rs 20 per litre to the industries which have the technology to convert it into alternative fuel.

    He also said that fly ash, produced during the combustion of coal, could be used for making bricks for construction.

    Referring to the ‘Amrit Kaal’, the PM’s buzzword for great times ahead, the minister said that India will see a surge in its economy in the next 25 years, and this will come on the back of resources, which have yet been unexplored or couldn’t be utilised because of lack of technology.

    JAMMU: Union Minister Jitendra Singh on Saturday said Ghulam Nabi Azad’s resignation from Congress was an internal matter of the party, even though it showed ‘lack of internal democracy’ in the party.

    He said BJP is the only option left in the country with its democratic values.

    “It is an internal matter of Congress but as a responsible citizen of a democratic country, one expects that there should be internal democracy in every party, just as we follow the democratic values,” Singh, the minister of state in the Prime Minister’s office, said here on Azad’s resignation.

    “If internal democracy is not followed in the party, then it is a cause of concern for its leaders and they should think over it,” he said.

    The minister said a recent survey has put Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the top of the list of the ‘most popular world leaders with an approval rating of 75 per cent and Congress too should be proud of the fact.

    “BJP is the only option left in the country. Modi is not only popular in the country but a recent survey at the international level put him at the top spot once again, which is a proud moment for all of us. Congress should also be proud of it as an Indian leader has emerged as the most popular leader at the global level,” he said.

    Asked whether BJP will welcome Azad in its fold, he said it is up to him to decide his next course of action. “It will be his decision what to do next.”

    On the timing of Assembly elections in Jammu and Kashmir, he said it is the prerogative of the Election commission of India to decide the date of the polls and BJP has no role in it.

    Earlier, addressing a seminar on ‘waste to wealth’ organised under ‘Ek Kaam Desh Ke Naam’ programme here, he said there is a need to create awareness about several waste products which can help people generate income with little effort.

    He said cooked oil from kitchens could be sold at about Rs 20 per litre to the industries which have the technology to convert it into alternative fuel.

    He also said that fly ash, produced during the combustion of coal, could be used for making bricks for construction.

    Referring to the ‘Amrit Kaal’, the PM’s buzzword for great times ahead, the minister said that India will see a surge in its economy in the next 25 years, and this will come on the back of resources, which have yet been unexplored or couldn’t be utilised because of lack of technology.

  • Azad exits: Ex-leaders express doubt over Congress’ future, fearful of more resignations

    By Online Desk

    NEW DELHI: Ghulam Nabi Azad’s resignation from the Congress may trigger a series of exits as the “deep-rooted malaise” within the party cannot be addressed by the present dispensation, former Congress leader and law minister Ashwini Kumar said Friday.

    He and other former Congress leaders said new combinations will soon emerge and occupy the liberal space in Indian polity.

    Kumar called upon the Congress leadership to reflect within and find solutions rather than “calumnising” the dissenters.

    “The resignation of Azad confirms yet again that under the present dispensation and in the current scheme of things, the deep-rooted malaise that afflicts the party cannot be addressed,” Kumar told PTI soon after Azad announced ending his decades-long association with the party.

    “The new but expected development will trigger more exits, which will further weaken the Congress pushing it into political irrelevance.”

    ALSO READ | Betrayal by Azad, say Mallikarjuna Kharge, D K Shivakumar

    The former Union minister said the resignation of Ghulam Nabi Azad signals the end of an era for what was once the “grand old Party” of India.

    “But life abhors a vacuum and so does politics. New combinations will emerge to occupy the secular and liberal space in the nation’s politics. It is sad to see the decimation of the party of freedom fighters which ought to have played a defining role in the present times.”

    “The Congress needs to reflect inwards, acknowledge its deficiencies and flaws of its internal politics rather than calumniating the dissenters,” the veteran Congressman said.

    “Will it learn from its decline is the question?” he asked.

    “Those who think that they can strengthen the Party by humiliating the veterans must know that no superstructure can last upon a weak foundation and that foundations of political parties are weakened when the tried and tested are diminished,” he said.

    Another former Congress spokesperson Jaiveer Shergill, who quit recently, said Azad’s resignation is a sad day for all well-meaning workers and leaders who give their blood and sweat to the Party.

    “In reality, this cabal is working within Congress on ‘Congress Todo Abhiyan’, elbowing out all the well-meaning leaders,” he told PTI “Now a senior leader is speaking about it becoming a club of PAs and security guards shows that leaders across age groups are frustrated and disappointed by this entire coterie culture that is thriving in Congress.”

    Shergill said Azad’s letter is the “correct diagnosis” of the problems plaguing the Congress Party.

    Priyanka Chaturvedi, who also quit and joined the Shiv Sena, said he respects Azad’s seniority and the resignation is not a surprise.

    However, the tone and tenor of the letter is surprising, she said.

    ALSO READ | Loyalist to rebel: Ghulam Nabi Azad’s journey in Congress

    “Over four decades of being part of Congress governments as well as reaching the pinnacle of Chief Minister to unbroken senior organisational role this letter sounds shallow.

    The attack on Rahul Gandhi in hindsight as well as Sonia Gandhi indirectly goes against the sentiments of how thousands of Congress workers have shown their faith in their leadership,” she said.

    Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma, who also quit the Congress a few years ago after being “ignored” by the leadership, said Azad’s resignation had many similarities with the one he had written when he quit the party in 2015.

    The problem in the Congress is that everybody knows Rahul Gandhi is “immature, whimsical and unpredictable” but his mother is still trying to promote him, Sarma said on the sidelines of a programme here.

    “Her mission will not be successful,” Sarma claimed.

    “I had written in 2015 that a time will come when only the Gandhis will be left in the Congress and all others will leave. This is what is happening.”

    Congress leader Sandeep Dikshit, who was part of the G23 which had written to Sonia Gandhi in 2020 seeking an organisational overhaul, expressed dismay and a “sense of betrayal” over Azad’s resignation.

    “When I read your letter of resignation, it gave me a sense of dismay and unfortunately, then a sense of betrayal,” he wrote to Azad.

    “I wholeheartedly and in full agreement signed the letter that you had written to the Congress president, and became a part of what some media people called the G23.”

    “But to my mind, we, and I in it, had raised the banner of reform, not a banner of revolt,” the former Delhi MP said.

    Azad resigned Friday from the party ahead of organisational elections.

    Azad also accused the leadership of committing a “giant fraud” on the party in the name of “farce and sham” internal polls, saying no such exercise has taken place at any level and lists are being prepared by the coterie that runs the AICC.

    Sushmita Dev, who also quit the Congress last year and joined the TMC, said “It is sad to see a stalwart like GNA leave the INC. It calls for introspection, rather than take a myopic view and say that the party doesn’t need him or he had a vested interest.”

    Meanwhile, former Punjab chief minister Amarinder Singh on Friday targeted the Congress, saying the party under the current leadership is “doomed beyond redemption”.

    Amarinder Singh had also quit the Congress last year following his unceremonious exit as the chief minister and floated his own outfit, Punjab Lok Congress.

    ALSO READ | Exits of Ghulam Nabi Azad, Kapil Sibal leave G-23 change seekers in disarray

    “When you cannot retain leaders like Ghulam Nabi Azad who spent his entire life with the party, there is something terminally wrong with your functioning and the way you treat your senior and seasoned leaders,” Singh said in a statement.

    Questioning the claims of some leaders that the party had given Azad so much, Amarinder Singh said it is a reciprocal process.

    “The party is made by the blood and sweat and hard work of leaders,” he remarked, adding, “It cannot be a one-man show.”

    Congratulating Azad for taking the bold decision, he said a conscientious and sincere leader cannot compromise on principles and dignity.

    “It is a particular set of people with a particular set of vested interests that has started the rot,” he said, adding that the senior leaders who withstood so many storms from time to time and stood by the party are being forced to leave.

    Amarinder Singh condemned the alleged malicious statements made by Congress leaders against Azad.

    “Instead of levelling baseless charges against him, you should introspect as why this exodus is turning non-stop and terminal,” he said.

    Azad’s decision to resign from the party has been one of “Congress todo (breaking the Congress)” instead of “Congress jodo (uniting the Congress)”, senior party leader Digvijaya Singh said on Friday.

    Azad’s shock move came a couple of days ahead of a virtual meeting of the Congress Working Committee (CWC), the highest decision-making body in the party, to approve the exact schedule of the organisational polls.

    Congress president Sonia Gandhi will preside over the CWC meeting on Sunday.

    Azad ended his five-decade-long association with the Congress, saying the party has been “comprehensively destroyed” and lashing out at Rahul Gandhi for “demolishing” its entire consultative mechanism.

    Singh, who heads the Congress committee organising the “Bharat Jodo Yatra” from Kanyakumari to Kashmir starting September 7, slammed Azad for his remarks that before starting the Bharat Jodo Yatra, the party leadership should have undertaken a “Congress jodo” exercise across the country.

    “You may have relations with those who abrogated Article 370 (of the Constitution), you may have developed close ties with them. You have written that Congress jodo is needed and in the same letter, you are saying there is no need for Bharat jodo. Instead of Congress jodo, your step has been for Congress todo and I strongly condemn it,” Singh said.

    “You have taken this step when Sonia Gandhi, whose family gave you everything, has gone abroad for treatment. I did not expect this from you. The Congress has given you everything and in these critical times, you should stand with the party,” he added.

    The former Madhya Pradesh chief minister said he hoped all Congress workers will strongly condemn Azad’s decision and resolutely participate in the “Bharat Jodo Yatra”.

    “The way divisions are being created, atrocities are being committed against minorities, Dalits and Adivasis — at that time, you are leaving the party. I am saddened. I did not expect this from you,” Singh said.

    Leader of Opposition in the Rajya Sabha Mallikarjun Kharge said, “Disappointed to see Sri Azad resign from the Congress. Leaving at this juncture will only strengthen the very fascist forces which is out to destroy the social fabric and Constitution of India. A better decision should have been taken keeping the interest of the nation in mind.”

    ALSO READ | Key points from Ghulam Nabi Azad’s letter of resignation from Congress

    “When the country is facing difficult times, Congress leaders and workers need to stay united and strengthen the party despite any differences. Our actions should not weaken the Congress movement, which has always stood by the nation in turbulent times,” he said.

    All India Congress Committee (AICC) in-charge of Jammu and Kashmir Rajani Patil also launched a scathing attack on Azad, saying “Soch se shayad ghulam hi rahe honge, tabhi aaj khud ko azad samajh rahe hain (perhaps he must have been a slave in his thinking, that is why he is considering himself free today).”

    “Enjoyed power for years and left his own people for opportunism at a time of struggle, this thinking reflects the feeling of slavery and deceit,” she said.

    Congress’s Rajya Sabha MP Shaktisinh Gohil also lashed out at Azad, saying it was the party that made him a “hero from zero”.

    “He got everything and when he was retiring from the Rajya Sabha, instead of accepting that, he may have fallen in the trap of the crocodile tears shed by (Prime Minister Narendra) Modi.

    Modi was being sarcastic against the party but Azad never refuted him (during his farewell in Parliament),” Gohil said.

    In a tweet, Congress general secretary Randeep Surjewala hit out at Azad, saying “1980 to 2021 — Continuous enjoyment of power under four generations of Gandhis (24 years Union Minister – J&K CM – 35 yrs GS), yet the same people and system is to be blamed in a vicious manner in the end. Tells a lot about character of the person and sense of gratitude for the Party.”

    Meanwhile, hours after Azad quit the Congress, eight senior party leaders including three former ministers resigned the party’s primary membership, with sources indicating they may form a new party soon.

    More leaders, perceived to be close to Azad, are contemplating resigning, the sources said.

    Former ministers R S Chib, G M Saroori and Abdul Rashid; former MLAs Mohammad Amin Bhat, Gulzar Ahmad Wani and Choudhary Mohammad Akram; former MLC Naresh Gupta and party leader Salman Nizami have resigned in Azad’s support, sources said.

    “Over the years as a member of the Congress Party, it has been my sincere endeavour to work for the betterment of my State – Jammu & Kashmir. I feel that in the prevailing circumstances, the Congress Party has lost its momentum in contributing towards the future of my State.”

    “Keeping in view the turmoil that the State of J&K has witnessed over the past decades, the people require a decisive leader like Azad to guide them towards a better future. I feel that the Congress Party has not been able to play the role that is expected of it,” Chib said in his resignation letter addressed to Congress president Sonia Gandhi.

    Saroori, a former vice president of J&K unit of Congress, along with several other leaders met Azad in Delhi before submitting their resignation from the party, the sources said.

    “Azad is a popular leader who served Congress for the last 50 years. He is a known face across the country for his contribution towards the national building,” Saroori told reporters after holding a meeting with Azad at his Delhi residence.

    Earlier, Saroori uploaded a joint resignation letter on his social media account, announcing Rashid, Bhat, Wani and Akram were quitting the party.

    “He cannot stay out of politics. His services are needed in J&K and we are sure that he will be the next chief minister of the state (UT). People of J&K also love their leaders and are ready to give any sacrifice for him,” Saroori said, dropping enough hints that Azad is likely to float his own party.

    Most of the Congress leaders, who are seen to be loyal to Azad, have already reached New Delhi and are camping there.

    The sources indicated the veteran Congress leader is likely to float a new party next month as the union territory prepares for the first Assembly elections since the abrogation of Article 370 in 2019.

    The sources said former deputy chief minister Tara Chand, former MP Jugal Kishore Sharma and Muneer Ahmad Mir from Kupwara are also mulling to resign from the Congress.

    The leaders are also considered close confidants of Azad, the sources said.

    “We, the senior party leaders, are holding a meeting in the aftermath of the new developments. We will be meeting Azad sahib as well,” Chand said.

    Senior Congress leader and former Union minister Prithviraj Chavan on Friday said the party shouldn’t have a “puppet president”, but one who has been duly elected.

    Talking to reporters, Chavan said the elected president should be assisted by leaders chosen by Congress workers in the forthcoming organizational polls in the functioning of the party.

    ALSO READ | Azad’s resignation letter similar to the one I wrote when leaving Congress: Himanta Sarma

    The former Maharashtra chief minister lamented the party hadn’t held organizational polls for the last 24 years.

    Asked about Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad resigning from the party, Chavan termed the veteran politician’s exit as unfortunate.

    He said Azad was the party’s senior-most leader and a secular face.

    Chavan, who is part of the ‘G23’ dissident group that had demanded internal reforms in the organization in a letter to Congress chief Sonia Gandhi in August 2020, said the intention behind the confidential missive was to protect the party’s interest and strengthen it, but the signatories were criticized and targeted.

    Azad, a former Union minister, was a prominent member of the ‘G23’ bloc.

    He said the Congress would make a “historic blunder” if it doesn’t come up with a good alternative to Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

    Chavan said maintaining a status quo in the party is not good for the Congress, which is out of power at the Centre since 2014.

    “It was not right time (for Azad) to leave the party,” former J-K minister and senior Congress leader Yogesh Sawhney told reporters soon after a meeting held at the party headquarters in Jammu.

    He said Azad should rethink on his decision.

    “Entire top party leadership is out of country. Azad sahib should think over his resignation,” Sawhney said.

    Asked whether it was a setback for the party, he said Azad’s resignation has not been accepted yet.

    Replying to another question whether Azad has revolted against the party leadership by openly expressing his opposition to its decisions, Sawhney said, “He (Azad) is better to explain his point of view. I cannot speak for him.”

    Congress leader Sandeep Dikshit on Friday expressed dismay and a “sense of betrayal” over Ghulam Nabi Azad’s resignation from the party, and said quitting strengthens the policies, systems and people that made them write the “letter of reform”.

    Dikshit, a former party MP, was part of the G23 leaders who had written to Congress chief Sonia Gandhi in August 2020 for an organisational overhaul and reforms, saying it was a “banner of reform and not a banner of revolt”.

    “When I read your letter of resignation, it gave me a sense of dismay and unfortunately, then a sense of betrayal,” he wrote to Azad.

    His letter came soon after senior Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad resigned from all party positions, including its primary membership, ahead of organisational elections and accused the leadership of committing “fraud” on the party in the name of “sham” internal polls.

    In his letter, Sandeep Dikshit, son of former Delhi chief minister Sheila Dikshit, told Azad that he has known him in his capacity as a citizen of India, Congress sympathiser, Congress worker and then as Congress MP.

    He said he had great respect for Azad’s work and ability.

    “I wholeheartedly and in full agreement signed the letter that you had written to the Congress president, and became a part of what some media people called the G23.

    “The matter we raised in that letter, and the spirit in which many of us signed it and many others supported what was written in it, was in many ways a pathway to revitalise this greatest of political parties, that lies, as you say in your letter also, in its darkest abyss today.

    But to my mind, we, and I in it, had raised the banner of reform, not a banner of revolt,” the former Delhi MP said.

    He said that by joining the signatories to the letter, he knew quite well that along with his constant public articulation of how he believed the Congress should strengthen itself, “I will never ever have a personal political future in it”.

    The Delhi Congress leader said it was his great hope that both the weight of the suggestions and the commitment towards the party of the signatories made this a worthwhile exercise.

    Noting that the fight to “retain the true spirit and mind of our great nation” was the real goal of the battle for reviving the Congress, he said, “Therefore it was equally important to remain inside the party, fight both policy and people, whichever and whoever we believe had and were damaging the party.”

    “But leaving the party, unfortunately, strengthens the very policies, systems and people that made us write our letter of reform as a demand, as a duty and as our right.

    The Indian National Congress will be that much weaker without Ghulam Nabi Azad, but the Ghulam Nabi Azad who authores the G23 letter, not the Ghulam Nabi Azad who authored this resignation,” Dikshit said in his letter to Azad.

    The Congress on Friday appointed leaders to coordinate the media activities of the ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’ in the states from where it will pass and said “Azad or no Azad” the organisational machinery moves ahead with determination.

    Congress media department head Pawan Khera said the party has approved the names of the people who will coordinate the media activities of the ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’ in states from where the “historic” yatra will be crossing.

    Congress’ Bharat Jodo Yatra which will traverse from Kanyakumari to Kashmir will start on September 7.

    “Azad or no Azad, the Congress organisational machine moves ahead with determination. The first list of state-wise media & publicity in-charges and coordinators for Bharat Jodo Yatra,” Khera tweeted, referring to senior Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad’s decision to resign from the party on Friday.

    “Bharat Jodo Yatra is not an event but a movement to bring together the people, from all walks of life, against the several evils that are plaguing the country today,” Khera said in his statement sharing the list of people appointed as coordinators for the Yatra.

    ALSO READ | Azad’s resignation from party unfortunate: Congress leader Bhupinder Hooda

    “The party and the leadership have high hopes and immense faith in you to promulgate the spirit of the Yatra amongst the people of India,” he said to the people chosen to helm the yatra’s publicity.

    According to the list, Shama Mohamed was named in charge of Tamil Nadu and Dolly Sharma for Andhra Pradesh.

    Lavanya Balal would be in-charge for Kerala, Szarita Laitphlang for Karnataka, S V Ramani for Telangana, Alka Lamba for Jammu and Kashmir, Shobha Oza for Maharashtra, Vibhakar Shastri for Rajasthan, Anshul Avijeet for Punjab, and Ragini Nayak for Madhya Pradesh.

    Coordinators were also appointed for media activities in states from where the Yatra will pass.

    (With PTI Inputs)

    NEW DELHI: Ghulam Nabi Azad’s resignation from the Congress may trigger a series of exits as the “deep-rooted malaise” within the party cannot be addressed by the present dispensation, former Congress leader and law minister Ashwini Kumar said Friday.

    He and other former Congress leaders said new combinations will soon emerge and occupy the liberal space in Indian polity.

    Kumar called upon the Congress leadership to reflect within and find solutions rather than “calumnising” the dissenters.

    “The resignation of Azad confirms yet again that under the present dispensation and in the current scheme of things, the deep-rooted malaise that afflicts the party cannot be addressed,” Kumar told PTI soon after Azad announced ending his decades-long association with the party.

    “The new but expected development will trigger more exits, which will further weaken the Congress pushing it into political irrelevance.”

    ALSO READ | Betrayal by Azad, say Mallikarjuna Kharge, D K Shivakumar

    The former Union minister said the resignation of Ghulam Nabi Azad signals the end of an era for what was once the “grand old Party” of India.

    “But life abhors a vacuum and so does politics. New combinations will emerge to occupy the secular and liberal space in the nation’s politics. It is sad to see the decimation of the party of freedom fighters which ought to have played a defining role in the present times.”

    “The Congress needs to reflect inwards, acknowledge its deficiencies and flaws of its internal politics rather than calumniating the dissenters,” the veteran Congressman said.

    “Will it learn from its decline is the question?” he asked.

    “Those who think that they can strengthen the Party by humiliating the veterans must know that no superstructure can last upon a weak foundation and that foundations of political parties are weakened when the tried and tested are diminished,” he said.

    Another former Congress spokesperson Jaiveer Shergill, who quit recently, said Azad’s resignation is a sad day for all well-meaning workers and leaders who give their blood and sweat to the Party.

    “In reality, this cabal is working within Congress on ‘Congress Todo Abhiyan’, elbowing out all the well-meaning leaders,” he told PTI “Now a senior leader is speaking about it becoming a club of PAs and security guards shows that leaders across age groups are frustrated and disappointed by this entire coterie culture that is thriving in Congress.”

    Shergill said Azad’s letter is the “correct diagnosis” of the problems plaguing the Congress Party.

    Priyanka Chaturvedi, who also quit and joined the Shiv Sena, said he respects Azad’s seniority and the resignation is not a surprise.

    However, the tone and tenor of the letter is surprising, she said.

    ALSO READ | Loyalist to rebel: Ghulam Nabi Azad’s journey in Congress

    “Over four decades of being part of Congress governments as well as reaching the pinnacle of Chief Minister to unbroken senior organisational role this letter sounds shallow.

    The attack on Rahul Gandhi in hindsight as well as Sonia Gandhi indirectly goes against the sentiments of how thousands of Congress workers have shown their faith in their leadership,” she said.

    Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma, who also quit the Congress a few years ago after being “ignored” by the leadership, said Azad’s resignation had many similarities with the one he had written when he quit the party in 2015.

    The problem in the Congress is that everybody knows Rahul Gandhi is “immature, whimsical and unpredictable” but his mother is still trying to promote him, Sarma said on the sidelines of a programme here.

    “Her mission will not be successful,” Sarma claimed.

    “I had written in 2015 that a time will come when only the Gandhis will be left in the Congress and all others will leave. This is what is happening.”

    Congress leader Sandeep Dikshit, who was part of the G23 which had written to Sonia Gandhi in 2020 seeking an organisational overhaul, expressed dismay and a “sense of betrayal” over Azad’s resignation.

    “When I read your letter of resignation, it gave me a sense of dismay and unfortunately, then a sense of betrayal,” he wrote to Azad.

    “I wholeheartedly and in full agreement signed the letter that you had written to the Congress president, and became a part of what some media people called the G23.”

    “But to my mind, we, and I in it, had raised the banner of reform, not a banner of revolt,” the former Delhi MP said.

    Azad resigned Friday from the party ahead of organisational elections.

    Azad also accused the leadership of committing a “giant fraud” on the party in the name of “farce and sham” internal polls, saying no such exercise has taken place at any level and lists are being prepared by the coterie that runs the AICC.

    Sushmita Dev, who also quit the Congress last year and joined the TMC, said “It is sad to see a stalwart like GNA leave the INC. It calls for introspection, rather than take a myopic view and say that the party doesn’t need him or he had a vested interest.”

    Meanwhile, former Punjab chief minister Amarinder Singh on Friday targeted the Congress, saying the party under the current leadership is “doomed beyond redemption”.

    Amarinder Singh had also quit the Congress last year following his unceremonious exit as the chief minister and floated his own outfit, Punjab Lok Congress.

    ALSO READ | Exits of Ghulam Nabi Azad, Kapil Sibal leave G-23 change seekers in disarray

    “When you cannot retain leaders like Ghulam Nabi Azad who spent his entire life with the party, there is something terminally wrong with your functioning and the way you treat your senior and seasoned leaders,” Singh said in a statement.

    Questioning the claims of some leaders that the party had given Azad so much, Amarinder Singh said it is a reciprocal process.

    “The party is made by the blood and sweat and hard work of leaders,” he remarked, adding, “It cannot be a one-man show.”

    Congratulating Azad for taking the bold decision, he said a conscientious and sincere leader cannot compromise on principles and dignity.

    “It is a particular set of people with a particular set of vested interests that has started the rot,” he said, adding that the senior leaders who withstood so many storms from time to time and stood by the party are being forced to leave.

    Amarinder Singh condemned the alleged malicious statements made by Congress leaders against Azad.

    “Instead of levelling baseless charges against him, you should introspect as why this exodus is turning non-stop and terminal,” he said.

    Azad’s decision to resign from the party has been one of “Congress todo (breaking the Congress)” instead of “Congress jodo (uniting the Congress)”, senior party leader Digvijaya Singh said on Friday.

    Azad’s shock move came a couple of days ahead of a virtual meeting of the Congress Working Committee (CWC), the highest decision-making body in the party, to approve the exact schedule of the organisational polls.

    Congress president Sonia Gandhi will preside over the CWC meeting on Sunday.

    Azad ended his five-decade-long association with the Congress, saying the party has been “comprehensively destroyed” and lashing out at Rahul Gandhi for “demolishing” its entire consultative mechanism.

    Singh, who heads the Congress committee organising the “Bharat Jodo Yatra” from Kanyakumari to Kashmir starting September 7, slammed Azad for his remarks that before starting the Bharat Jodo Yatra, the party leadership should have undertaken a “Congress jodo” exercise across the country.

    “You may have relations with those who abrogated Article 370 (of the Constitution), you may have developed close ties with them. You have written that Congress jodo is needed and in the same letter, you are saying there is no need for Bharat jodo. Instead of Congress jodo, your step has been for Congress todo and I strongly condemn it,” Singh said.

    “You have taken this step when Sonia Gandhi, whose family gave you everything, has gone abroad for treatment. I did not expect this from you. The Congress has given you everything and in these critical times, you should stand with the party,” he added.

    The former Madhya Pradesh chief minister said he hoped all Congress workers will strongly condemn Azad’s decision and resolutely participate in the “Bharat Jodo Yatra”.

    “The way divisions are being created, atrocities are being committed against minorities, Dalits and Adivasis — at that time, you are leaving the party. I am saddened. I did not expect this from you,” Singh said.

    Leader of Opposition in the Rajya Sabha Mallikarjun Kharge said, “Disappointed to see Sri Azad resign from the Congress. Leaving at this juncture will only strengthen the very fascist forces which is out to destroy the social fabric and Constitution of India. A better decision should have been taken keeping the interest of the nation in mind.”

    ALSO READ | Key points from Ghulam Nabi Azad’s letter of resignation from Congress

    “When the country is facing difficult times, Congress leaders and workers need to stay united and strengthen the party despite any differences. Our actions should not weaken the Congress movement, which has always stood by the nation in turbulent times,” he said.

    All India Congress Committee (AICC) in-charge of Jammu and Kashmir Rajani Patil also launched a scathing attack on Azad, saying “Soch se shayad ghulam hi rahe honge, tabhi aaj khud ko azad samajh rahe hain (perhaps he must have been a slave in his thinking, that is why he is considering himself free today).”

    “Enjoyed power for years and left his own people for opportunism at a time of struggle, this thinking reflects the feeling of slavery and deceit,” she said.

    Congress’s Rajya Sabha MP Shaktisinh Gohil also lashed out at Azad, saying it was the party that made him a “hero from zero”.

    “He got everything and when he was retiring from the Rajya Sabha, instead of accepting that, he may have fallen in the trap of the crocodile tears shed by (Prime Minister Narendra) Modi.

    Modi was being sarcastic against the party but Azad never refuted him (during his farewell in Parliament),” Gohil said.

    In a tweet, Congress general secretary Randeep Surjewala hit out at Azad, saying “1980 to 2021 — Continuous enjoyment of power under four generations of Gandhis (24 years Union Minister – J&K CM – 35 yrs GS), yet the same people and system is to be blamed in a vicious manner in the end. Tells a lot about character of the person and sense of gratitude for the Party.”

    Meanwhile, hours after Azad quit the Congress, eight senior party leaders including three former ministers resigned the party’s primary membership, with sources indicating they may form a new party soon.

    More leaders, perceived to be close to Azad, are contemplating resigning, the sources said.

    Former ministers R S Chib, G M Saroori and Abdul Rashid; former MLAs Mohammad Amin Bhat, Gulzar Ahmad Wani and Choudhary Mohammad Akram; former MLC Naresh Gupta and party leader Salman Nizami have resigned in Azad’s support, sources said.

    “Over the years as a member of the Congress Party, it has been my sincere endeavour to work for the betterment of my State – Jammu & Kashmir. I feel that in the prevailing circumstances, the Congress Party has lost its momentum in contributing towards the future of my State.”

    “Keeping in view the turmoil that the State of J&K has witnessed over the past decades, the people require a decisive leader like Azad to guide them towards a better future. I feel that the Congress Party has not been able to play the role that is expected of it,” Chib said in his resignation letter addressed to Congress president Sonia Gandhi.

    Saroori, a former vice president of J&K unit of Congress, along with several other leaders met Azad in Delhi before submitting their resignation from the party, the sources said.

    “Azad is a popular leader who served Congress for the last 50 years. He is a known face across the country for his contribution towards the national building,” Saroori told reporters after holding a meeting with Azad at his Delhi residence.

    Earlier, Saroori uploaded a joint resignation letter on his social media account, announcing Rashid, Bhat, Wani and Akram were quitting the party.

    “He cannot stay out of politics. His services are needed in J&K and we are sure that he will be the next chief minister of the state (UT). People of J&K also love their leaders and are ready to give any sacrifice for him,” Saroori said, dropping enough hints that Azad is likely to float his own party.

    Most of the Congress leaders, who are seen to be loyal to Azad, have already reached New Delhi and are camping there.

    The sources indicated the veteran Congress leader is likely to float a new party next month as the union territory prepares for the first Assembly elections since the abrogation of Article 370 in 2019.

    The sources said former deputy chief minister Tara Chand, former MP Jugal Kishore Sharma and Muneer Ahmad Mir from Kupwara are also mulling to resign from the Congress.

    The leaders are also considered close confidants of Azad, the sources said.

    “We, the senior party leaders, are holding a meeting in the aftermath of the new developments. We will be meeting Azad sahib as well,” Chand said.

    Senior Congress leader and former Union minister Prithviraj Chavan on Friday said the party shouldn’t have a “puppet president”, but one who has been duly elected.

    Talking to reporters, Chavan said the elected president should be assisted by leaders chosen by Congress workers in the forthcoming organizational polls in the functioning of the party.

    ALSO READ | Azad’s resignation letter similar to the one I wrote when leaving Congress: Himanta Sarma

    The former Maharashtra chief minister lamented the party hadn’t held organizational polls for the last 24 years.

    Asked about Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad resigning from the party, Chavan termed the veteran politician’s exit as unfortunate.

    He said Azad was the party’s senior-most leader and a secular face.

    Chavan, who is part of the ‘G23’ dissident group that had demanded internal reforms in the organization in a letter to Congress chief Sonia Gandhi in August 2020, said the intention behind the confidential missive was to protect the party’s interest and strengthen it, but the signatories were criticized and targeted.

    Azad, a former Union minister, was a prominent member of the ‘G23’ bloc.

    He said the Congress would make a “historic blunder” if it doesn’t come up with a good alternative to Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

    Chavan said maintaining a status quo in the party is not good for the Congress, which is out of power at the Centre since 2014.

    “It was not right time (for Azad) to leave the party,” former J-K minister and senior Congress leader Yogesh Sawhney told reporters soon after a meeting held at the party headquarters in Jammu.

    He said Azad should rethink on his decision.

    “Entire top party leadership is out of country. Azad sahib should think over his resignation,” Sawhney said.

    Asked whether it was a setback for the party, he said Azad’s resignation has not been accepted yet.

    Replying to another question whether Azad has revolted against the party leadership by openly expressing his opposition to its decisions, Sawhney said, “He (Azad) is better to explain his point of view. I cannot speak for him.”

    Congress leader Sandeep Dikshit on Friday expressed dismay and a “sense of betrayal” over Ghulam Nabi Azad’s resignation from the party, and said quitting strengthens the policies, systems and people that made them write the “letter of reform”.

    Dikshit, a former party MP, was part of the G23 leaders who had written to Congress chief Sonia Gandhi in August 2020 for an organisational overhaul and reforms, saying it was a “banner of reform and not a banner of revolt”.

    “When I read your letter of resignation, it gave me a sense of dismay and unfortunately, then a sense of betrayal,” he wrote to Azad.

    His letter came soon after senior Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad resigned from all party positions, including its primary membership, ahead of organisational elections and accused the leadership of committing “fraud” on the party in the name of “sham” internal polls.

    In his letter, Sandeep Dikshit, son of former Delhi chief minister Sheila Dikshit, told Azad that he has known him in his capacity as a citizen of India, Congress sympathiser, Congress worker and then as Congress MP.

    He said he had great respect for Azad’s work and ability.

    “I wholeheartedly and in full agreement signed the letter that you had written to the Congress president, and became a part of what some media people called the G23.

    “The matter we raised in that letter, and the spirit in which many of us signed it and many others supported what was written in it, was in many ways a pathway to revitalise this greatest of political parties, that lies, as you say in your letter also, in its darkest abyss today.

    But to my mind, we, and I in it, had raised the banner of reform, not a banner of revolt,” the former Delhi MP said.

    He said that by joining the signatories to the letter, he knew quite well that along with his constant public articulation of how he believed the Congress should strengthen itself, “I will never ever have a personal political future in it”.

    The Delhi Congress leader said it was his great hope that both the weight of the suggestions and the commitment towards the party of the signatories made this a worthwhile exercise.

    Noting that the fight to “retain the true spirit and mind of our great nation” was the real goal of the battle for reviving the Congress, he said, “Therefore it was equally important to remain inside the party, fight both policy and people, whichever and whoever we believe had and were damaging the party.”

    “But leaving the party, unfortunately, strengthens the very policies, systems and people that made us write our letter of reform as a demand, as a duty and as our right.

    The Indian National Congress will be that much weaker without Ghulam Nabi Azad, but the Ghulam Nabi Azad who authores the G23 letter, not the Ghulam Nabi Azad who authored this resignation,” Dikshit said in his letter to Azad.

    The Congress on Friday appointed leaders to coordinate the media activities of the ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’ in the states from where it will pass and said “Azad or no Azad” the organisational machinery moves ahead with determination.

    Congress media department head Pawan Khera said the party has approved the names of the people who will coordinate the media activities of the ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’ in states from where the “historic” yatra will be crossing.

    Congress’ Bharat Jodo Yatra which will traverse from Kanyakumari to Kashmir will start on September 7.

    “Azad or no Azad, the Congress organisational machine moves ahead with determination. The first list of state-wise media & publicity in-charges and coordinators for Bharat Jodo Yatra,” Khera tweeted, referring to senior Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad’s decision to resign from the party on Friday.

    “Bharat Jodo Yatra is not an event but a movement to bring together the people, from all walks of life, against the several evils that are plaguing the country today,” Khera said in his statement sharing the list of people appointed as coordinators for the Yatra.

    ALSO READ | Azad’s resignation from party unfortunate: Congress leader Bhupinder Hooda

    “The party and the leadership have high hopes and immense faith in you to promulgate the spirit of the Yatra amongst the people of India,” he said to the people chosen to helm the yatra’s publicity.

    According to the list, Shama Mohamed was named in charge of Tamil Nadu and Dolly Sharma for Andhra Pradesh.

    Lavanya Balal would be in-charge for Kerala, Szarita Laitphlang for Karnataka, S V Ramani for Telangana, Alka Lamba for Jammu and Kashmir, Shobha Oza for Maharashtra, Vibhakar Shastri for Rajasthan, Anshul Avijeet for Punjab, and Ragini Nayak for Madhya Pradesh.

    Coordinators were also appointed for media activities in states from where the Yatra will pass.

    (With PTI Inputs)

  • Loyalist to rebel: Ghulam Nabi Azad’s journey in Congress

    By PTI

    Veteran Congressman Ghulam Nabi Azad, a constant fixture in the organisation’s decision-making process since the tumultuous times of Emergency, finally fell out with his mother party on Friday after a not-so-smooth relationship with the top brass in the past couple of years.

    “The situation has become irretrievable,” Azad, 73, said in his parting shot to Sonia Gandhi, whose trusted confidante he remained right from the time of Sitaram Kesri’s unceremonious exit as the party’s chief in 2000. 

    Known for his ability to negotiate the challenging twists and turns of body politic, Azad was often sent by the leadership to firefight any situation – be it a crisis in a faction-ridden state unit like Haryana or cobble up a new alliance and government in Karnataka with the JDS.

    But things were never the same between Azad and Gandhi after the summer of 2020 when he headed the ‘group of 23’, seeking leadership and organisational change.

    Observers say the relationship broke irretrievably after the Congress chief denied Azad, the sitting leader of opposition in Rajya Sabha, a renomination to the upper house last year.

    Many an eyebrow were raised when Prime Minister Narendra Modi profusely praised Azad while delivering an emotional speech during the Congress leader’s farewell in Rajya Sabha in 2021.

    In return, Azad was also effusive in his praise for Modi. Again Congress did not take it easily when the Modi government conferred the Padma Bhushan on Azad.

    Senior leaders called it a political decision and not one on merit. 

    ALSO READ | Key points from Ghulam Nabi Azad’s letter of resignation from Congress

    And very recently, Azad resigned from the post of head of the Jammu and Kashmir Congress campaign committee hours after he was appointed. The writing was on the wall since then.

    Azad’s exit was simultaneously a shock and a surprise to sections across the Congress, considering he was a key figure in the party’s decision-making processes through the Sanjay Gandhi days and the tumultuous times of the Emergency under Indira Gandhi, followed by the Rajiv Gandhi era, the Narasimha Rao period and eventually the tenure of the longest serving Congress president Sonia Gandhi.

    Born in 1949 in Soti village of Bhadarwah in Jammu and Kashmir’s Doda district, Azad made his way up the ladder in the Congress and went on to become the chief minister of his home state in 2006.

    In his almost 50 years in politics, he has been a two-term Lok Sabha and a five-term Rajya Sabha member, besides occupying all top Congress positions and a union minister in all Congress governments since 1982.

    He also remained a two-term member of J&K Legislative Assembly in 2006 and 2008.

    Many Congress leaders term Azad’s move as an “outright betrayal”, even as the old warhorse kept both his supporters and critics guessing about his future moves following his resignation from all Congress posts today.

    ALSO READ | GNA’s DNA has been ‘Modi-fied’: Congress’ Jairam Ramesh on Ghulam Nabi Azad

    “Some of my other colleagues and I will now persevere to perpetuate the ideals for which we have dedicated our entire adult lives outside the formal fold of the Indian National Congress,” said the former chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir, who appears set for fresh innings in the Union Territory where the election process has begun with the finalisation of the electoral rolls.

    Azad’s name will be etched in Congress history as a quintessential rebel who raised a banner of revolt against the formidable first family of the Congress and even managed to bring 23 leaders together in a group called G23.

    The G23, dissenters to some, preferred to call itself the reformist panel which sought meaningful organisational overhaul, an advisory role for the Gandhis and new full-time party chief.

    The letter G23 wrote to Sonia Gandhi in August 2020, under the leadership of Azad, laid the ground for the former minister’s eventual divorce from the party today.

    Azad entered the political fray as secretary of the Block Congress Committee in Bhalessa in Jammu and Kashmir from 1973 to 1975 and moved up the ranks to become the president of the J&K Youth Congress in 1975-76.

    He won his first parliamentary election in 1980 from Washim in Maharashtra and became a minister at the Centre under Indira Gandhi in 1982.

    He later served under all Congress prime ministers – Rajiv Gandhi, Narasimha Rao and Manmohan Singh.

    Azad was first given a Rajya Sabha ticket in June 1991.

    Azad said he joined the Indian National Congress in Jammu & Kashmir in mid-1970s when it was still a taboo to be associated with the party given its chequered history in the state from August 8, 1953, onwards the arrest of Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah being the nadir of its “political myopia”.

    ALSO READ | Exits of Ghulam Nabi Azad, Kapil Sibal leave G-23 change seekers in disarray

    He said he was inspired by the ideals of Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Lal Nehru, Sardar Patel, Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, Subhash Chandra Bose and other leading lights of the freedom struggle from his student days and joined the party at the personal insistence of Sanjay Gandhi.

    From 1977 onwards he was general secretary of the Indian Youth Congress (IYC) led by Late Sanjay Gandhi and went to jail several times, his longest period in Tihar jail being from December 20, 1978, to end of January 1979.

    After Sanjay’s demise, he took over as the National President of IYC in 1980 and had the privilege of inducting Rajiv Gandhi into the Indian Youth Congress as a Member of the National Council on Sanjay Gandhi’s first death anniversary on June 23, 1981.

    Azad also served as AICC general secretary with every president of the Congress since the mid-1980s and was a member of the Congress Parliamentary Board headed by Rajiv Gandhi till his death in May 1991 and later with Rao till the latter decided not to reconstitute the Congress Parliamentary Board in October 1992.

    He was also a member of the Congress Working Committee, the highest decision-making body of the Congress, continuously for nearly four decades both in an elected and a nominated capacity and served as AICC general secretary in-charge of every state and Union Territory of the country at one point of time or the other over the last 35 years.

    Azad claimed that he won 90 per cent of states that he was in-charge from time to time and finally served as the Leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha for seven years.

    Veteran Congressman Ghulam Nabi Azad, a constant fixture in the organisation’s decision-making process since the tumultuous times of Emergency, finally fell out with his mother party on Friday after a not-so-smooth relationship with the top brass in the past couple of years.

    “The situation has become irretrievable,” Azad, 73, said in his parting shot to Sonia Gandhi, whose trusted confidante he remained right from the time of Sitaram Kesri’s unceremonious exit as the party’s chief in 2000. 

    Known for his ability to negotiate the challenging twists and turns of body politic, Azad was often sent by the leadership to firefight any situation – be it a crisis in a faction-ridden state unit like Haryana or cobble up a new alliance and government in Karnataka with the JDS.

    But things were never the same between Azad and Gandhi after the summer of 2020 when he headed the ‘group of 23’, seeking leadership and organisational change.

    Observers say the relationship broke irretrievably after the Congress chief denied Azad, the sitting leader of opposition in Rajya Sabha, a renomination to the upper house last year.

    Many an eyebrow were raised when Prime Minister Narendra Modi profusely praised Azad while delivering an emotional speech during the Congress leader’s farewell in Rajya Sabha in 2021.

    In return, Azad was also effusive in his praise for Modi. Again Congress did not take it easily when the Modi government conferred the Padma Bhushan on Azad.

    Senior leaders called it a political decision and not one on merit. 

    ALSO READ | Key points from Ghulam Nabi Azad’s letter of resignation from Congress

    And very recently, Azad resigned from the post of head of the Jammu and Kashmir Congress campaign committee hours after he was appointed. The writing was on the wall since then.

    Azad’s exit was simultaneously a shock and a surprise to sections across the Congress, considering he was a key figure in the party’s decision-making processes through the Sanjay Gandhi days and the tumultuous times of the Emergency under Indira Gandhi, followed by the Rajiv Gandhi era, the Narasimha Rao period and eventually the tenure of the longest serving Congress president Sonia Gandhi.

    Born in 1949 in Soti village of Bhadarwah in Jammu and Kashmir’s Doda district, Azad made his way up the ladder in the Congress and went on to become the chief minister of his home state in 2006.

    In his almost 50 years in politics, he has been a two-term Lok Sabha and a five-term Rajya Sabha member, besides occupying all top Congress positions and a union minister in all Congress governments since 1982.

    He also remained a two-term member of J&K Legislative Assembly in 2006 and 2008.

    Many Congress leaders term Azad’s move as an “outright betrayal”, even as the old warhorse kept both his supporters and critics guessing about his future moves following his resignation from all Congress posts today.

    ALSO READ | GNA’s DNA has been ‘Modi-fied’: Congress’ Jairam Ramesh on Ghulam Nabi Azad

    “Some of my other colleagues and I will now persevere to perpetuate the ideals for which we have dedicated our entire adult lives outside the formal fold of the Indian National Congress,” said the former chief minister of Jammu and Kashmir, who appears set for fresh innings in the Union Territory where the election process has begun with the finalisation of the electoral rolls.

    Azad’s name will be etched in Congress history as a quintessential rebel who raised a banner of revolt against the formidable first family of the Congress and even managed to bring 23 leaders together in a group called G23.

    The G23, dissenters to some, preferred to call itself the reformist panel which sought meaningful organisational overhaul, an advisory role for the Gandhis and new full-time party chief.

    The letter G23 wrote to Sonia Gandhi in August 2020, under the leadership of Azad, laid the ground for the former minister’s eventual divorce from the party today.

    Azad entered the political fray as secretary of the Block Congress Committee in Bhalessa in Jammu and Kashmir from 1973 to 1975 and moved up the ranks to become the president of the J&K Youth Congress in 1975-76.

    He won his first parliamentary election in 1980 from Washim in Maharashtra and became a minister at the Centre under Indira Gandhi in 1982.

    He later served under all Congress prime ministers – Rajiv Gandhi, Narasimha Rao and Manmohan Singh.

    Azad was first given a Rajya Sabha ticket in June 1991.

    Azad said he joined the Indian National Congress in Jammu & Kashmir in mid-1970s when it was still a taboo to be associated with the party given its chequered history in the state from August 8, 1953, onwards the arrest of Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah being the nadir of its “political myopia”.

    ALSO READ | Exits of Ghulam Nabi Azad, Kapil Sibal leave G-23 change seekers in disarray

    He said he was inspired by the ideals of Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Lal Nehru, Sardar Patel, Maulana Abul Kalam Azad, Subhash Chandra Bose and other leading lights of the freedom struggle from his student days and joined the party at the personal insistence of Sanjay Gandhi.

    From 1977 onwards he was general secretary of the Indian Youth Congress (IYC) led by Late Sanjay Gandhi and went to jail several times, his longest period in Tihar jail being from December 20, 1978, to end of January 1979.

    After Sanjay’s demise, he took over as the National President of IYC in 1980 and had the privilege of inducting Rajiv Gandhi into the Indian Youth Congress as a Member of the National Council on Sanjay Gandhi’s first death anniversary on June 23, 1981.

    Azad also served as AICC general secretary with every president of the Congress since the mid-1980s and was a member of the Congress Parliamentary Board headed by Rajiv Gandhi till his death in May 1991 and later with Rao till the latter decided not to reconstitute the Congress Parliamentary Board in October 1992.

    He was also a member of the Congress Working Committee, the highest decision-making body of the Congress, continuously for nearly four decades both in an elected and a nominated capacity and served as AICC general secretary in-charge of every state and Union Territory of the country at one point of time or the other over the last 35 years.

    Azad claimed that he won 90 per cent of states that he was in-charge from time to time and finally served as the Leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha for seven years.

  • Azad jumps on ‘leave Congress’ bandwagon; exodus of leaders from party continues unabated

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: The exodus of senior Congress leaders, once seen as mainstays of the party, continues unabated with Ghulam Nabi Azad jumping on the “leave Congress” bandwagon at a time when the party is struggling to shore up its dwindling electoral fortunes.

    Several leaders, many of them part of the party’s highest decision-making body Congress Working Committee (CWC), have exited recently, citing reasons ranging from the party’s lack of ground-level presence to its leadership’s shortcomings.

    Azad resigned from the party on Friday ahead of the organisational polls, terming the Congress “comprehensively destroyed” and accusing the leadership of committing “fraud” on the party in the name of “sham” internal elections.

    Delivering another blow to the embattled party that has seen a series of high-profile exits, including that of Kapil Sibal, Ashwani Kumar and Sunil Jakhar, in the recent past, Azad wrote a no-holds-barred letter to Congress president Sonia Gandhi, detailing his grievances.

    ALSO READ | Exits of Ghulam Nabi Azad, Kapil Sibal leave G-23 change seekers in disarray

    Azad’s exit comes months after another “Group of 23” (G-23) leader, Sibal, resigned from the party and filed his nomination as a Samajwadi Party-backed independent candidate for the Rajya Sabha polls from Uttar Pradesh.

    He was elected to the Upper House of Parliament in June.

    The G-23 members had written to Sonia Gandhi, seeking organisational reforms, in 2020.

    The Congress has failed to stem the exodus of leaders despite the promise of reforms, including structural changes and prominence to youngsters, at its brainstorming session in Rajasthan’s Udaipur in May.

    Two influential leaders — Sunil Jakhar and Hardik Patel — quit the party in quick succession this year.

    Jakhar, a former Punjab Congress chief with ties with the party spanning three generations, quit even as the party’s Chintan Shivir was on in May.

    Patel, a young leader who came into prominence with the Patidar quota agitation in Gujarat, was elevated as the working president of the state unit in July 2020 as part of efforts to strengthen the organisation and strongly take on the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in its stronghold.

    He subsequently quit the Congress and launched a scathing attack on its leadership.

    FROM OUR ARCHIVES | Disgruntled with Gandhis? Ghulam Nabi Azad readies to do an Amarinder in J&K ahead of polls

    The Congress is seen making little effort to woo its leaders back and Rahul Gandhi has been saying for quite some time in party forums that anyone who succumbs to the pressure of the BJP in this “fight for ideology” is free to leave.

    Earlier this week, Congress spokesperson Jaiveer Shergill quit the party, alleging that sycophancy is eating into the organisation like “termites”.

    In a letter to Sonia Gandhi, Shergill resigned as the party’s national spokesperson, saying the primary reason behind his decision was that “the ideology and the vision of the current decision makers of the Congress is no longer in sync with the aspirations of the youth and a modern India”.

    Earlier this year, RPN Singh, a former Union minister, a CWC member and the son of late Congress leader CPN Singh, joined the ranks of Jitin Prasada and Jyotiraditya Scindia, both CWC members who quit the party to join the BJP over the last couple of years.

    While Prasada is the son of Jitendra Prasada, Scindia’s father was Madhavrao Scindia, both Congress veterans.

    Singh’s exit came just months after Sushmita Dev, another young Congress leader and the daughter of former Union minister Santosh Mohan Dev, quit the party to join the Mamata Banerjee-led Trinamool Congress (TMC).

    The story of senior leaders leaving the Congress began ahead of the 2014 Lok Sabha polls when the party lost Haryana heavyweights Birender Singh and Rao Inderjit Singh.

    Both went on to become ministers in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s first cabinet.

    There have been other examples as well.

    Former Assam Congress stalwart Himanta Biswa Sarma joined the BJP in 2015 and climbed the saffron ladder to become the chief minister of the state.

    Some other prominent Congress leaders and former ministers in the UPA government who quit the party and joined the BJP are S M Krishna and Jayanti Natarajan.

    Krishna is a former Karnataka chief minister and Natarajan was the Union environment minister during the UPA regime.

    The Congress also lost once Gandhi family loyalist and the scion of the erstwhile Amethi royal family, Sanjay Sinh, to the BJP last year.

    Former Maharashtra chief minister Narayan Rane and then leader of opposition in the state Assembly Radhakrishna Vikhe Patil quit the party to join the BJP in 2019.

    The Congress also suffered a jolt in Assam in 2019 when its chief whip in the Rajya Sabha, Bhubaneswar Kalita, joined the BJP.

    He is now a Rajya Sabha member from the state.

    Also in the northeast, the Congress suffered setbacks when its former chief minister in Manipur N Biren Singh joined the BJP in 2016, citing differences with then incumbent Ibobi Singh.

    In Arunachal Pradesh, Chief Minister Pema Khandu left the Congress in 2016 before the Assembly polls.

    In Uttar Pradesh too, ahead of the 2017 Assembly polls, former state Congress chief Rita Bahuguna Joshi quit the party.

    Other prominent faces who left the Congress in the recent past include Tamil actor Khushboo Sundar and former Congress spokesperson Tom Vadakkan, both of whom joined the BJP.

    While the leaders quitting the Congress have cited various reasons, from not being heard by the leadership to leaving for better prospects, the party has repeatedly called out their weak ideological moorings.

    NEW DELHI: The exodus of senior Congress leaders, once seen as mainstays of the party, continues unabated with Ghulam Nabi Azad jumping on the “leave Congress” bandwagon at a time when the party is struggling to shore up its dwindling electoral fortunes.

    Several leaders, many of them part of the party’s highest decision-making body Congress Working Committee (CWC), have exited recently, citing reasons ranging from the party’s lack of ground-level presence to its leadership’s shortcomings.

    Azad resigned from the party on Friday ahead of the organisational polls, terming the Congress “comprehensively destroyed” and accusing the leadership of committing “fraud” on the party in the name of “sham” internal elections.

    Delivering another blow to the embattled party that has seen a series of high-profile exits, including that of Kapil Sibal, Ashwani Kumar and Sunil Jakhar, in the recent past, Azad wrote a no-holds-barred letter to Congress president Sonia Gandhi, detailing his grievances.

    ALSO READ | Exits of Ghulam Nabi Azad, Kapil Sibal leave G-23 change seekers in disarray

    Azad’s exit comes months after another “Group of 23” (G-23) leader, Sibal, resigned from the party and filed his nomination as a Samajwadi Party-backed independent candidate for the Rajya Sabha polls from Uttar Pradesh.

    He was elected to the Upper House of Parliament in June.

    The G-23 members had written to Sonia Gandhi, seeking organisational reforms, in 2020.

    The Congress has failed to stem the exodus of leaders despite the promise of reforms, including structural changes and prominence to youngsters, at its brainstorming session in Rajasthan’s Udaipur in May.

    Two influential leaders — Sunil Jakhar and Hardik Patel — quit the party in quick succession this year.

    Jakhar, a former Punjab Congress chief with ties with the party spanning three generations, quit even as the party’s Chintan Shivir was on in May.

    Patel, a young leader who came into prominence with the Patidar quota agitation in Gujarat, was elevated as the working president of the state unit in July 2020 as part of efforts to strengthen the organisation and strongly take on the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in its stronghold.

    He subsequently quit the Congress and launched a scathing attack on its leadership.

    FROM OUR ARCHIVES | Disgruntled with Gandhis? Ghulam Nabi Azad readies to do an Amarinder in J&K ahead of polls

    The Congress is seen making little effort to woo its leaders back and Rahul Gandhi has been saying for quite some time in party forums that anyone who succumbs to the pressure of the BJP in this “fight for ideology” is free to leave.

    Earlier this week, Congress spokesperson Jaiveer Shergill quit the party, alleging that sycophancy is eating into the organisation like “termites”.

    In a letter to Sonia Gandhi, Shergill resigned as the party’s national spokesperson, saying the primary reason behind his decision was that “the ideology and the vision of the current decision makers of the Congress is no longer in sync with the aspirations of the youth and a modern India”.

    Earlier this year, RPN Singh, a former Union minister, a CWC member and the son of late Congress leader CPN Singh, joined the ranks of Jitin Prasada and Jyotiraditya Scindia, both CWC members who quit the party to join the BJP over the last couple of years.

    While Prasada is the son of Jitendra Prasada, Scindia’s father was Madhavrao Scindia, both Congress veterans.

    Singh’s exit came just months after Sushmita Dev, another young Congress leader and the daughter of former Union minister Santosh Mohan Dev, quit the party to join the Mamata Banerjee-led Trinamool Congress (TMC).

    The story of senior leaders leaving the Congress began ahead of the 2014 Lok Sabha polls when the party lost Haryana heavyweights Birender Singh and Rao Inderjit Singh.

    Both went on to become ministers in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s first cabinet.

    There have been other examples as well.

    Former Assam Congress stalwart Himanta Biswa Sarma joined the BJP in 2015 and climbed the saffron ladder to become the chief minister of the state.

    Some other prominent Congress leaders and former ministers in the UPA government who quit the party and joined the BJP are S M Krishna and Jayanti Natarajan.

    Krishna is a former Karnataka chief minister and Natarajan was the Union environment minister during the UPA regime.

    The Congress also lost once Gandhi family loyalist and the scion of the erstwhile Amethi royal family, Sanjay Sinh, to the BJP last year.

    Former Maharashtra chief minister Narayan Rane and then leader of opposition in the state Assembly Radhakrishna Vikhe Patil quit the party to join the BJP in 2019.

    The Congress also suffered a jolt in Assam in 2019 when its chief whip in the Rajya Sabha, Bhubaneswar Kalita, joined the BJP.

    He is now a Rajya Sabha member from the state.

    Also in the northeast, the Congress suffered setbacks when its former chief minister in Manipur N Biren Singh joined the BJP in 2016, citing differences with then incumbent Ibobi Singh.

    In Arunachal Pradesh, Chief Minister Pema Khandu left the Congress in 2016 before the Assembly polls.

    In Uttar Pradesh too, ahead of the 2017 Assembly polls, former state Congress chief Rita Bahuguna Joshi quit the party.

    Other prominent faces who left the Congress in the recent past include Tamil actor Khushboo Sundar and former Congress spokesperson Tom Vadakkan, both of whom joined the BJP.

    While the leaders quitting the Congress have cited various reasons, from not being heard by the leadership to leaving for better prospects, the party has repeatedly called out their weak ideological moorings.

  • Exits of Ghulam Nabi Azad, Kapil Sibal leave G-23 change seekers in disarray

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: Ghulam Nabi Azad’s resignation from the Congress on Friday marked the most high-profile exit of one of the “Group of 23” (G-23) leaders, who had written to party chief Sonia Gandhi two years ago for a “collective and inclusive leadership” in the organisation, exposing the faultlines in the grand old party.

    The G-23, the members of which were lampooned by the party loyalists after their letter became public on August 24, 2020, has virtually disintegrated over the last two years with the resignations of Azad and Kapil Sibal, seen as the prime movers of the initiative, and others such as Shashi Tharoor, M Veerappa Moily and Mukul Wasnik making peace with the high-command.

    Leaders such as Jitin Prasada and Yogananda Shastri have also quit the Congress to join the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) respectively.

    Prasada is a minister in the Uttar Pradesh government now, while Shastri heads the Delhi unit of the NCP.

    Former Union minister Anand Sharma, who created a flutter recently by resigning as the chairman of the party’s steering committee for Himachal Pradesh, months ahead of the Assembly polls in the hill state, appears to be mending his ways by asserting his loyalty to the Congress.

    “It is also necessary that all of us work together towards achieving our common goal,” Sharma said, reiterating that he remained a lifelong Congressman.

    FROM OUR ARCHIVES | Disgruntled with Gandhis? Ghulam Nabi Azad readies to do an Amarinder in J&K ahead of polls

    The other signatories to the letter sent to the Congress chief two years ago were Bhupinder Singh Hooda, Prithviraj Chavan, Manish Tewari, Milind Deora, Rajinder Kaur Bhattal, Vivek Tankha, Renuka Chowdhary, P J Kurien, Raj Babbar, Kuldeep Sharma, Akhilesh Prasad Singh, Arvinder Singh Lovely, Kaul Singh Thakur, Ajay Singh and Sandeep Dikshit.

    While Tankha has been rehabilitated and sent to the Rajya Sabha from Madhya Pradesh in June, Deora and Tharoor have been given party responsibilities in Maharashtra for the “Bharat Jodo Yatra”.

    Hooda, who is unwilling to cede political space within the Congress in his stronghold of Haryana, recently succeeded in ensuring the appointment of his loyalist Udai Bhan as the party’s state unit president.

    Wasnik, who did not show much interest in the G-23 activities after their letter to Gandhi became public, was made a member of the Congress Task Force-2024 and later, given a Rajya Sabha berth.

    Tewari, the Lok Sabha member from Punjab’s Anandpur Sahib, has been ploughing a lonely furrow for quite some time, often taking a position that is divergent from the official Congress view on key issues.

    Dikshit, the son of former Delhi chief minister Shiela Dikshit, made a sharp riposte to Azad’s resignation letter, reminding the veteran leader that the G-23 move was a “banner of reform, not a banner of revolt”.

    Moily had already dissociated himself from the G-23 last year, while Chavan, a former Maharashtra chief minister and now an MLA, remains on the sidelines in the Maharashtra Congress.

    NEW DELHI: Ghulam Nabi Azad’s resignation from the Congress on Friday marked the most high-profile exit of one of the “Group of 23” (G-23) leaders, who had written to party chief Sonia Gandhi two years ago for a “collective and inclusive leadership” in the organisation, exposing the faultlines in the grand old party.

    The G-23, the members of which were lampooned by the party loyalists after their letter became public on August 24, 2020, has virtually disintegrated over the last two years with the resignations of Azad and Kapil Sibal, seen as the prime movers of the initiative, and others such as Shashi Tharoor, M Veerappa Moily and Mukul Wasnik making peace with the high-command.

    Leaders such as Jitin Prasada and Yogananda Shastri have also quit the Congress to join the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) respectively.

    Prasada is a minister in the Uttar Pradesh government now, while Shastri heads the Delhi unit of the NCP.

    Former Union minister Anand Sharma, who created a flutter recently by resigning as the chairman of the party’s steering committee for Himachal Pradesh, months ahead of the Assembly polls in the hill state, appears to be mending his ways by asserting his loyalty to the Congress.

    “It is also necessary that all of us work together towards achieving our common goal,” Sharma said, reiterating that he remained a lifelong Congressman.

    FROM OUR ARCHIVES | Disgruntled with Gandhis? Ghulam Nabi Azad readies to do an Amarinder in J&K ahead of polls

    The other signatories to the letter sent to the Congress chief two years ago were Bhupinder Singh Hooda, Prithviraj Chavan, Manish Tewari, Milind Deora, Rajinder Kaur Bhattal, Vivek Tankha, Renuka Chowdhary, P J Kurien, Raj Babbar, Kuldeep Sharma, Akhilesh Prasad Singh, Arvinder Singh Lovely, Kaul Singh Thakur, Ajay Singh and Sandeep Dikshit.

    While Tankha has been rehabilitated and sent to the Rajya Sabha from Madhya Pradesh in June, Deora and Tharoor have been given party responsibilities in Maharashtra for the “Bharat Jodo Yatra”.

    Hooda, who is unwilling to cede political space within the Congress in his stronghold of Haryana, recently succeeded in ensuring the appointment of his loyalist Udai Bhan as the party’s state unit president.

    Wasnik, who did not show much interest in the G-23 activities after their letter to Gandhi became public, was made a member of the Congress Task Force-2024 and later, given a Rajya Sabha berth.

    Tewari, the Lok Sabha member from Punjab’s Anandpur Sahib, has been ploughing a lonely furrow for quite some time, often taking a position that is divergent from the official Congress view on key issues.

    Dikshit, the son of former Delhi chief minister Shiela Dikshit, made a sharp riposte to Azad’s resignation letter, reminding the veteran leader that the G-23 move was a “banner of reform, not a banner of revolt”.

    Moily had already dissociated himself from the G-23 last year, while Chavan, a former Maharashtra chief minister and now an MLA, remains on the sidelines in the Maharashtra Congress.

  • Azad’s resignation letter similar to the one I wrote when leaving Congress: Himanta Sarma

    By PTI

    GUWAHATI: Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma on Friday said that the resignation letter sent by Ghulam Nabi Azad to Congress president Sonia Gandhi had many similarities with the one he had written when he quit the party in 2015.

    The problem in the Congress is that everybody knows Rahul Gandhi is “immature, whimsical and unpredictable” but his mother is still trying to promote her, Sarma said on the sidelines of a programme here.

    “The Congress president is not taking care of the party. She had been basically trying to promote her son all these years, but it is a futile attempt. Her mission will not be successful,” Sarma claimed.

    People who had been loyal to the party are deserting it one by one, he said.

    “I had written in 2015 that a time will come when only the Gandhis will be left in the Congress and all others will leave. This is what is happening,” the CM stated.

    Senior Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad on Friday resigned from all party positions, including its primary membership, delivering another blow to the embattled party that has seen a series of leaders leave it.

    The situation in the Congress, Azad maintained, has reached a point of no return and now “proxies” are being propped to take over leadership of the party.

    Sarma, talking to reporters, said the letter written “by me in 2015 has many similarities to the one written by Azad ‘sahab’. The issues that were there earlier, are still there and will continue to be there, leading to a situation when only the Gandhis will remain in the part,” he added.

    Referring to Congress leader Rahul Gandhi, the chief minister said that he is a “boon” for the BJP.

    “When leaders of both the parties are compared, the BJP is way ahead of the Congress and that suits us,” he added.

    Sarma resigned from the Congress in 2015 to join the BJP before Assam assembly elections the year after.

    He was largely credited for the saffron party’s first electoral victory in a northeastern state.

    GUWAHATI: Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma on Friday said that the resignation letter sent by Ghulam Nabi Azad to Congress president Sonia Gandhi had many similarities with the one he had written when he quit the party in 2015.

    The problem in the Congress is that everybody knows Rahul Gandhi is “immature, whimsical and unpredictable” but his mother is still trying to promote her, Sarma said on the sidelines of a programme here.

    “The Congress president is not taking care of the party. She had been basically trying to promote her son all these years, but it is a futile attempt. Her mission will not be successful,” Sarma claimed.

    People who had been loyal to the party are deserting it one by one, he said.

    “I had written in 2015 that a time will come when only the Gandhis will be left in the Congress and all others will leave. This is what is happening,” the CM stated.

    Senior Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad on Friday resigned from all party positions, including its primary membership, delivering another blow to the embattled party that has seen a series of leaders leave it.

    The situation in the Congress, Azad maintained, has reached a point of no return and now “proxies” are being propped to take over leadership of the party.

    Sarma, talking to reporters, said the letter written “by me in 2015 has many similarities to the one written by Azad ‘sahab’. The issues that were there earlier, are still there and will continue to be there, leading to a situation when only the Gandhis will remain in the part,” he added.

    Referring to Congress leader Rahul Gandhi, the chief minister said that he is a “boon” for the BJP.

    “When leaders of both the parties are compared, the BJP is way ahead of the Congress and that suits us,” he added.

    Sarma resigned from the Congress in 2015 to join the BJP before Assam assembly elections the year after.

    He was largely credited for the saffron party’s first electoral victory in a northeastern state.

  • Six Jammu and Kashmir Congress members quit party after Azad

    By ANI

    After veteran leader Ghulam Nabi Azad resigned from the Congress on Friday, at least six more members of the party in Jammu and Kashmir quit in “support” of Azad, according to ANI.

    GM Saroori, Haji Abdul Rashid, Mohd Amin Bhat, Gulzar Ahmad Wani, and Choudhary Mohd Akram have resigned.

    Former minister RS Chib, too, has resigned from the party, as per media reports.

    After veteran leader Ghulam Nabi Azad resigned from the Congress on Friday, at least six more members of the party in Jammu and Kashmir quit in “support” of Azad, according to ANI.

    GM Saroori, Haji Abdul Rashid, Mohd Amin Bhat, Gulzar Ahmad Wani, and Choudhary Mohd Akram have resigned.

    Former minister RS Chib, too, has resigned from the party, as per media reports.

  • Key points from Ghulam Nabi Azad’s letter of resignation from Congress

    By PTI

    Senior Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad on Friday resigned from all party positions, including its primary membership, delivering another blow to the embattled party that has seen a series of leaders leave it.

    In a five-page no holds barred letter to Congress president Sonia Gandhi that comes ahead of crucial organisational elections in the party, Azad said he does so with a “heavy heart”.

    FROM OUR ARCHIVES | Disgruntled with Gandhis? Ghulam Nabi Azad readies to do an Amarinder in J&K ahead of polls

    Here are key points from Ghulam Nabi Azad’s letter of resignation from Congress:

    * Azad recounted his long association with the Congress since he joined the party in the 1970s.

    * Azad accuses Rahul Gandhi of demolishing the consultative mechanism within the party.

    * All senior and experienced leaders were sidelined and new coterie of inexperienced sycophants started running the affairs of the party.

    * Azad terms tearing of a government ordinance by Rahul Gandhi in full media view as a “glaring example” of “immaturity”.

    * This single action contributed significantly to the defeat of the UPA government in 2014.

    * Azad said recommendations of the brainstorming sessions in Pachmarhi (1998), Shimla (2003) and Jaipur (2013) to revitalise the party were never properly implemented.

    * The detailed action plan to revitalise the party in the run-up to the 2014 Lok Sabha elections “lying in the storeroom of the AICC for the past 9 years.

    * No effort was made to even examine them seriously despite repeated reminders to Congress President Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi.

    * Under Sonia Gandhi’s leadership since 2014 and subsequently that of Rahul Gandhi, Congress has lost two Lok Sabha elections in a “humiliating manner”.

    The party also lost 39 out of the 49 assembly elections held between 2014 and 2022.

    * Situation in party worsened since 2019 elections.

    Senior party functionaries insulted at extended Working Committee meetings where Rahul Gandhi stepped down as President in a “huff”.

    * “Remote control model” that demolished the institutional integrity of the UPA government now applies to Congress.

    * You (Sonia Gandhi) just a nominal figurehead, all important decisions taken by Rahul Gandhi or “rather worse his security guards and personal assistants”.

    * When 23 senior leaders flagged the “abysmal drift” in the party, the “coterie chose to unleash its sycophants on us and got us attacked”.

    * Congress has reached point of no return, “proxies” were being propped up to take over the leadership of the party, an apparent reference to the upcoming election of the party president.

    * This experiment doomed to fail as the “chosen one” would be nothing more than a “puppet on a string”.

    * Congress has conceded political space to BJP and state-level space to regional parties because the leadership has tried to “foist a non-serious individual at the helm of the party.

    * Entire organisational election process is “farce and a sham” and a “giant fraud” on the party.

    * Before starting Bharat Jodo Yatra, the leadership should have undertaken a ‘Congress Jodo’ exercise.

    Senior Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad on Friday resigned from all party positions, including its primary membership, delivering another blow to the embattled party that has seen a series of leaders leave it.

    In a five-page no holds barred letter to Congress president Sonia Gandhi that comes ahead of crucial organisational elections in the party, Azad said he does so with a “heavy heart”.

    FROM OUR ARCHIVES | Disgruntled with Gandhis? Ghulam Nabi Azad readies to do an Amarinder in J&K ahead of polls

    Here are key points from Ghulam Nabi Azad’s letter of resignation from Congress:

    * Azad recounted his long association with the Congress since he joined the party in the 1970s.

    * Azad accuses Rahul Gandhi of demolishing the consultative mechanism within the party.

    * All senior and experienced leaders were sidelined and new coterie of inexperienced sycophants started running the affairs of the party.

    * Azad terms tearing of a government ordinance by Rahul Gandhi in full media view as a “glaring example” of “immaturity”.

    * This single action contributed significantly to the defeat of the UPA government in 2014.

    * Azad said recommendations of the brainstorming sessions in Pachmarhi (1998), Shimla (2003) and Jaipur (2013) to revitalise the party were never properly implemented.

    * The detailed action plan to revitalise the party in the run-up to the 2014 Lok Sabha elections “lying in the storeroom of the AICC for the past 9 years.

    * No effort was made to even examine them seriously despite repeated reminders to Congress President Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi.

    * Under Sonia Gandhi’s leadership since 2014 and subsequently that of Rahul Gandhi, Congress has lost two Lok Sabha elections in a “humiliating manner”.

    The party also lost 39 out of the 49 assembly elections held between 2014 and 2022.

    * Situation in party worsened since 2019 elections.

    Senior party functionaries insulted at extended Working Committee meetings where Rahul Gandhi stepped down as President in a “huff”.

    * “Remote control model” that demolished the institutional integrity of the UPA government now applies to Congress.

    * You (Sonia Gandhi) just a nominal figurehead, all important decisions taken by Rahul Gandhi or “rather worse his security guards and personal assistants”.

    * When 23 senior leaders flagged the “abysmal drift” in the party, the “coterie chose to unleash its sycophants on us and got us attacked”.

    * Congress has reached point of no return, “proxies” were being propped up to take over the leadership of the party, an apparent reference to the upcoming election of the party president.

    * This experiment doomed to fail as the “chosen one” would be nothing more than a “puppet on a string”.

    * Congress has conceded political space to BJP and state-level space to regional parties because the leadership has tried to “foist a non-serious individual at the helm of the party.

    * Entire organisational election process is “farce and a sham” and a “giant fraud” on the party.

    * Before starting Bharat Jodo Yatra, the leadership should have undertaken a ‘Congress Jodo’ exercise.

  • Senior Congress leader Anand Sharma resigns from Himachal committee

    By Express News Service

    NEW DELHI: After veteran party leader Ghulam Nabi Azad turned down the role of Jammu and Kashmir Congress Campaign Committee Chairman, senior leader and member of G23 ginger group Anand Sharma Sunday resigned as Chairman of the Himachal Congress Steering Committee, months before state elections.

    In a letter to Congress chief Sonia Gandhi, Sharma expressed reservations that he has not been kept in the loop of key election strategy meetings and decisions related to poll-bound states and that his self-respect is non-negotiable.

    Sharma, who hails from the state, added that he will campaign for the party in the state and would proceed on a four-day tour of the state. In the letter, he cited a multiplicity of committees and overlapping functions.

    This comes as a setback to the party ahead of the elections in the state where the party has chances to make a comeback. Earlier, Azad had declined the role of the campaign committee chairman. Elections in UTs of Jammu and Kashmir can be held anytime with the process of finalizing electoral rolls in full swing. Both the leaders have been denied Rajya Sabha tickets by the party and were reportedly upset over the decision.  

    In April this year, the party announced key election committees, and Sharma was named as Chairman of the Steering Committee. Former Rajya Sabha deputy leader said that he had requested the general secretary organisation and AICC in charge to clarify the mandate of the steering committee to delineate its mandate and role.

    “On 20th June meetings of senior leaders including PCC President, CLP leader and Chairman Campaign Committee and those of other committees were held for election preparations. On August 7 and 8, in charge and central AICC observers visited Shimla. Meetings of the core group, senior leaders, and HPCC General house were convened. The Chairman of the Steering Committee was neither informed nor invited for any of the meetings held, not even for the general house,” the letter stated.

    The two have been part of the senior party leaders of the G23 grouping that wrote to Sonia Gandhi in 2020 seeking organisational elections in the party and revamping the functioning of the party. The process of election of Congress president is to be completed between Aug 21 and Sep 20 this year.

    NEW DELHI: After veteran party leader Ghulam Nabi Azad turned down the role of Jammu and Kashmir Congress Campaign Committee Chairman, senior leader and member of G23 ginger group Anand Sharma Sunday resigned as Chairman of the Himachal Congress Steering Committee, months before state elections.

    In a letter to Congress chief Sonia Gandhi, Sharma expressed reservations that he has not been kept in the loop of key election strategy meetings and decisions related to poll-bound states and that his self-respect is non-negotiable.

    Sharma, who hails from the state, added that he will campaign for the party in the state and would proceed on a four-day tour of the state. In the letter, he cited a multiplicity of committees and overlapping functions.

    This comes as a setback to the party ahead of the elections in the state where the party has chances to make a comeback. Earlier, Azad had declined the role of the campaign committee chairman. Elections in UTs of Jammu and Kashmir can be held anytime with the process of finalizing electoral rolls in full swing. Both the leaders have been denied Rajya Sabha tickets by the party and were reportedly upset over the decision.  

    In April this year, the party announced key election committees, and Sharma was named as Chairman of the Steering Committee. Former Rajya Sabha deputy leader said that he had requested the general secretary organisation and AICC in charge to clarify the mandate of the steering committee to delineate its mandate and role.

    “On 20th June meetings of senior leaders including PCC President, CLP leader and Chairman Campaign Committee and those of other committees were held for election preparations. On August 7 and 8, in charge and central AICC observers visited Shimla. Meetings of the core group, senior leaders, and HPCC General house were convened. The Chairman of the Steering Committee was neither informed nor invited for any of the meetings held, not even for the general house,” the letter stated.

    The two have been part of the senior party leaders of the G23 grouping that wrote to Sonia Gandhi in 2020 seeking organisational elections in the party and revamping the functioning of the party. The process of election of Congress president is to be completed between Aug 21 and Sep 20 this year.