Tag: Shashi Tharoor

  • Shashi Tharoor collects nomination form, first to officially enter race for Congress chief

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: Senior Congress leader Shashi Tharoor on Saturday got the nomination form for the AICC presidential poll collected from the party headquarters here with sources saying he is likely to file his papers on September 30.

    Tharoor’s close aide Aalim Javeri collected the forms from the office of the party’s central election authority chairman Madhusudan Mistry on the first day of the start of the nomination process, all but confirming an electoral face-off for the top party post with Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot.

    The nomination form is likely to be filed by Tharoor on the last day of the nomination process on September 30 as the idea is to collect nomination-endorsing signatures from across the country, sources told PTI.

    A total of 10 Pradesh Congress Committee delegates are needed to endorse a candidate.

    After over two decades, the Congress is set to see a contest for the post of party chief with Gehlot, who has announced his candidature, expected to take on Tharoor.

    Tharoor on Monday had met Sonia Gandhi and expressed his intention to contest the poll.

    The Congress president conveyed she would stay “neutral” in the elections, according to sources.

    Sonia Gandhi had welcomed the idea of more people contesting the poll and dispelled the notion that there would be an “official candidate”.

    According to a notification issued by the party on Thursday, the process for filing nominations for the election will be held from September 24 to 30.

    The date for a scrutiny of the nomination papers is October 1, while the last date for withdrawal of nominations is October 8.

    The final list of candidates will be published at 5 pm on October 8.

    The polling, if needed, will be held on October 17.

    The counting of votes will be taken up on October 19 and the results will be declared the same day.

    More than 9,000 Pradesh Congress Committee (PCC) delegates will vote in the poll.

    The Congress last saw a contest for the party president’s post in November 2000.

    Jitendra Prasada had lost to Sonia Gandhi in 2000 and prior to that, Sitaram Kesri had defeated Sharad Pawar and Rajesh Pilot in 1997.

    NEW DELHI: Senior Congress leader Shashi Tharoor on Saturday got the nomination form for the AICC presidential poll collected from the party headquarters here with sources saying he is likely to file his papers on September 30.

    Tharoor’s close aide Aalim Javeri collected the forms from the office of the party’s central election authority chairman Madhusudan Mistry on the first day of the start of the nomination process, all but confirming an electoral face-off for the top party post with Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot.

    The nomination form is likely to be filed by Tharoor on the last day of the nomination process on September 30 as the idea is to collect nomination-endorsing signatures from across the country, sources told PTI.

    A total of 10 Pradesh Congress Committee delegates are needed to endorse a candidate.

    After over two decades, the Congress is set to see a contest for the post of party chief with Gehlot, who has announced his candidature, expected to take on Tharoor.

    Tharoor on Monday had met Sonia Gandhi and expressed his intention to contest the poll.

    The Congress president conveyed she would stay “neutral” in the elections, according to sources.

    Sonia Gandhi had welcomed the idea of more people contesting the poll and dispelled the notion that there would be an “official candidate”.

    According to a notification issued by the party on Thursday, the process for filing nominations for the election will be held from September 24 to 30.

    The date for a scrutiny of the nomination papers is October 1, while the last date for withdrawal of nominations is October 8.

    The final list of candidates will be published at 5 pm on October 8.

    The polling, if needed, will be held on October 17.

    The counting of votes will be taken up on October 19 and the results will be declared the same day.

    More than 9,000 Pradesh Congress Committee (PCC) delegates will vote in the poll.

    The Congress last saw a contest for the party president’s post in November 2000.

    Jitendra Prasada had lost to Sonia Gandhi in 2000 and prior to that, Sitaram Kesri had defeated Sharad Pawar and Rajesh Pilot in 1997.

  • Congress presidential poll: Party asks spokespersons to refrain from commenting on candidates

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: A day after Congress leader Gourav Vallabh taunted Shashi Tharoor over his probable AICC president poll bid, the party on Friday urged all its spokespersons and communication department office bearers to refrain from commenting on any colleague contesting the elections.

    In the first indicator of leaders taking sides in the upcoming contest for the top post, Vallabh had also voiced support for another contender, Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot, who many believe has the backing of the current leadership.

    According to sources, AICC general secretary in-charge Communications Jairam Ramesh, in a message to all spokespersons and office bearers of the communication department, said, “I would strongly urge all spokespersons and office bearers of Communications Department of AICC to refrain from making any comment of any kind on any colleague of ours contesting the elections for the post of Congress president.”

    “We all have our individual preferences but our job is to only highlight that the Congress is the only political party to have a democratic and transparent system in place for election to the post of its president,” he said.

    Ramesh told the spokespersons and office bearers of the communications department that their job is to highlight that the Congress is the only political party in India to have an independent election authority to conduct organisational elections, the sources said.

    “A person wanting to contest needs no nod from anybody to do so except from 10 PCC delegates for filing nomination form. The election authority ensures free and fair elections. Spokespersons have to ensure that elections are seen to be free and fair,” Ramesh said.

    “If elections have to be held on October 17th so be it. We welcome it. Even so the focus of the entire party organisation should be and indeed is to make the Bharat Jodo Yatra, which has already evoked tremendous response even more of a resounding success,” the sources quoted the Congress general secretary as saying in his message.

    Vallabh is also a party spokesperson but he asserted his comments were as a Congress worker and not spokesperson.

    “Like crores of workers, my first wish is that Rahul Gandhi Ji should provide his leadership to the Congress and the country. But if Rahul Gandhi ji remains steadfast on his decision (of not taking up the Congress chief post) and one has to choose between the two names that are appearing in public discussion, then there is no comparison between the two,” Vallabh had said in a series of tweets in Hindi.

    On the one hand, there is Gehlot who has the experience of being a Union minister, three times chief minister, five times MP, five times MLA, and who has defeated Narendra Modi-Amit Shah in a direct contest and who has had 45 years of “spotless” political life, he said.

    “On the other hand there is Shashi Tharoor sahib who has made only one major contribution to the party in the last eight years — sent letters to Congress President Sonia Gandhi ji when she was hospitalised, this act caused pain to crores of party workers like me. The choice is very simple and clear,” he had said.

    Vallabh’s remarks were a reference to the letter sent by a group of 23 leaders, including Tharoor, to Sonia Gandhi in 2020 seeking large-scale reforms in the party.

    In a late night tweet, Tharoor posted former US president Theodore Roosevelt’s famous speech known as “The Man in the Arena”.

    “It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat,” Roosevelt had said in the speech posted by Tharoor.

    pic.twitter.com/SAexs4Ct4W

    — Shashi Tharoor (@ShashiTharoor) September 22, 2022

    Many saw the post by Tharoor as his response to Vallabh and other critics, as well as a reference to his probable All India Congress Committee (AICC) presidential post run.

    After over two decades, the Congress is set to see a contest for the post of party chief.

    Gehlot and Tharoor are being seen as the likely contenders.

    The Congress’ central election authority on Thursday issued a notification for the AICC president polls, setting the ball rolling for electing the successor to the longest-serving party chief Sonia Gandhi.

    Tharoor on Monday had met Sonia Gandhi and expressed his intention to contest the upcoming AICC chief polls, while the Congress president conveyed that she would stay “neutral” in the elections, according to sources.

    Sonia Gandhi welcomed the idea of more people contesting the polls and dispelled the notion that there would be an “official candidate”.

    NEW DELHI: A day after Congress leader Gourav Vallabh taunted Shashi Tharoor over his probable AICC president poll bid, the party on Friday urged all its spokespersons and communication department office bearers to refrain from commenting on any colleague contesting the elections.

    In the first indicator of leaders taking sides in the upcoming contest for the top post, Vallabh had also voiced support for another contender, Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot, who many believe has the backing of the current leadership.

    According to sources, AICC general secretary in-charge Communications Jairam Ramesh, in a message to all spokespersons and office bearers of the communication department, said, “I would strongly urge all spokespersons and office bearers of Communications Department of AICC to refrain from making any comment of any kind on any colleague of ours contesting the elections for the post of Congress president.”

    “We all have our individual preferences but our job is to only highlight that the Congress is the only political party to have a democratic and transparent system in place for election to the post of its president,” he said.

    Ramesh told the spokespersons and office bearers of the communications department that their job is to highlight that the Congress is the only political party in India to have an independent election authority to conduct organisational elections, the sources said.

    “A person wanting to contest needs no nod from anybody to do so except from 10 PCC delegates for filing nomination form. The election authority ensures free and fair elections. Spokespersons have to ensure that elections are seen to be free and fair,” Ramesh said.

    “If elections have to be held on October 17th so be it. We welcome it. Even so the focus of the entire party organisation should be and indeed is to make the Bharat Jodo Yatra, which has already evoked tremendous response even more of a resounding success,” the sources quoted the Congress general secretary as saying in his message.

    Vallabh is also a party spokesperson but he asserted his comments were as a Congress worker and not spokesperson.

    “Like crores of workers, my first wish is that Rahul Gandhi Ji should provide his leadership to the Congress and the country. But if Rahul Gandhi ji remains steadfast on his decision (of not taking up the Congress chief post) and one has to choose between the two names that are appearing in public discussion, then there is no comparison between the two,” Vallabh had said in a series of tweets in Hindi.

    On the one hand, there is Gehlot who has the experience of being a Union minister, three times chief minister, five times MP, five times MLA, and who has defeated Narendra Modi-Amit Shah in a direct contest and who has had 45 years of “spotless” political life, he said.

    “On the other hand there is Shashi Tharoor sahib who has made only one major contribution to the party in the last eight years — sent letters to Congress President Sonia Gandhi ji when she was hospitalised, this act caused pain to crores of party workers like me. The choice is very simple and clear,” he had said.

    Vallabh’s remarks were a reference to the letter sent by a group of 23 leaders, including Tharoor, to Sonia Gandhi in 2020 seeking large-scale reforms in the party.

    In a late night tweet, Tharoor posted former US president Theodore Roosevelt’s famous speech known as “The Man in the Arena”.

    “It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who neither know victory nor defeat,” Roosevelt had said in the speech posted by Tharoor.

    pic.twitter.com/SAexs4Ct4W

    — Shashi Tharoor (@ShashiTharoor) September 22, 2022

    Many saw the post by Tharoor as his response to Vallabh and other critics, as well as a reference to his probable All India Congress Committee (AICC) presidential post run.

    After over two decades, the Congress is set to see a contest for the post of party chief.

    Gehlot and Tharoor are being seen as the likely contenders.

    The Congress’ central election authority on Thursday issued a notification for the AICC president polls, setting the ball rolling for electing the successor to the longest-serving party chief Sonia Gandhi.

    Tharoor on Monday had met Sonia Gandhi and expressed his intention to contest the upcoming AICC chief polls, while the Congress president conveyed that she would stay “neutral” in the elections, according to sources.

    Sonia Gandhi welcomed the idea of more people contesting the polls and dispelled the notion that there would be an “official candidate”.

  • Tharoor conveys intent to contest AICC chief polls to Sonia, she says will remain ‘neutral’: Sources 

    Gandhi welcomed the idea of more people contesting the polls and dispelled the notion that there would be an “official candidate”

  • Tharoor endorses petition seeking ‘constructive reforms’ in Congress; meets Sonia Gandhi

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: Adding to the buzz over the possibility of his contesting Congress president polls, Shashi Tharoor on Monday endorsed a petition by a group of young party members seeking “constructive reforms” and met AICC chief Sonia Gandhi here.

    The petition shared by Tharoor on Twitter sought reforms and a pledge by AICC president candidates to implement the Udaipur Declaration in entirety if elected.

    The former Union minister said it had been signed by over 650 people so far.

    “I welcome this petition that is being circulated by a group of young @INCIndia members, seeking constructive reforms in the Party. It has gathered over 650 signatures so far. I am happy to endorse it & to go beyond it,” Tharoor tweeted with screenshots of the petition.

    Shortly after endorsing the petition, Tharoor met the party’s interim chief Sonia Gandhi at her residence.

    He, however, did not disclose what transpired during the meeting.

    The meeting comes amid indications that Tharoor, who was among the group of 23 leaders who had written to Gandhi in 2020 demanding organisational overhaul, may contest the Congress president’s election and may file his nomination.

    The petition that Tharoor endorsed said, “We are members of the Congress party with a desire to strengthen the party to reflect the hopes and aspirations of our nation.”

    The petition stated some of the tenets of the Udaipur Declaration that was made on May 15, 2022, after the party’s brainstorming session.

    “We appeal to each candidate in the election for the President of the All India Congress Committee to undertake a public pledge to involve party members from block committees up to the CWC and implement the Udaipur Declaration in entirety within the first 100 days of assuming office,” the petition said.

    In its declaration, the Congress had announced wide-ranging organisational reforms to make the party battle ready for the next round of assembly and Lok Sabha polls, stressing on wider representation to those under 50 years of age and enforcing ‘one person, one post’ and ‘one family, one ticket’ rules with riders.

    Asked about the possibility of him running for the post of the Congress president, Tharoor had told PTI earlier this month, “I have only welcomed the fact that an election will be held. I believe that is very good for the party.”

    “Of course it is gratifying that this general statement of democratic principle has immediately led to large numbers of people around the country welcoming the prospect of my contesting. But as I have made it clear, I have not declared my candidacy,” Tharoor had said.

    “I hope many will contest in order to give the membership a wide choice. So far I have neither ruled myself in nor ruled myself out,” the former Union minister had asserted.

    The process for filing nominations for the election will be held from September 24 to 30.

    The last date for withdrawal of nominations is October 8 and the election, if required, will be held on October 17. The results will be out on October 19.

    NEW DELHI: Adding to the buzz over the possibility of his contesting Congress president polls, Shashi Tharoor on Monday endorsed a petition by a group of young party members seeking “constructive reforms” and met AICC chief Sonia Gandhi here.

    The petition shared by Tharoor on Twitter sought reforms and a pledge by AICC president candidates to implement the Udaipur Declaration in entirety if elected.

    The former Union minister said it had been signed by over 650 people so far.

    “I welcome this petition that is being circulated by a group of young @INCIndia members, seeking constructive reforms in the Party. It has gathered over 650 signatures so far. I am happy to endorse it & to go beyond it,” Tharoor tweeted with screenshots of the petition.

    Shortly after endorsing the petition, Tharoor met the party’s interim chief Sonia Gandhi at her residence.

    He, however, did not disclose what transpired during the meeting.

    The meeting comes amid indications that Tharoor, who was among the group of 23 leaders who had written to Gandhi in 2020 demanding organisational overhaul, may contest the Congress president’s election and may file his nomination.

    The petition that Tharoor endorsed said, “We are members of the Congress party with a desire to strengthen the party to reflect the hopes and aspirations of our nation.”

    The petition stated some of the tenets of the Udaipur Declaration that was made on May 15, 2022, after the party’s brainstorming session.

    “We appeal to each candidate in the election for the President of the All India Congress Committee to undertake a public pledge to involve party members from block committees up to the CWC and implement the Udaipur Declaration in entirety within the first 100 days of assuming office,” the petition said.

    In its declaration, the Congress had announced wide-ranging organisational reforms to make the party battle ready for the next round of assembly and Lok Sabha polls, stressing on wider representation to those under 50 years of age and enforcing ‘one person, one post’ and ‘one family, one ticket’ rules with riders.

    Asked about the possibility of him running for the post of the Congress president, Tharoor had told PTI earlier this month, “I have only welcomed the fact that an election will be held. I believe that is very good for the party.”

    “Of course it is gratifying that this general statement of democratic principle has immediately led to large numbers of people around the country welcoming the prospect of my contesting. But as I have made it clear, I have not declared my candidacy,” Tharoor had said.

    “I hope many will contest in order to give the membership a wide choice. So far I have neither ruled myself in nor ruled myself out,” the former Union minister had asserted.

    The process for filing nominations for the election will be held from September 24 to 30.

    The last date for withdrawal of nominations is October 8 and the election, if required, will be held on October 17. The results will be out on October 19.

  • ‘Yatra can achieve both Bharat Jodo and Congress Jodo’: Shashi Tharoor on party’s leadership crisis

    By PTI

    THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: The Congress’ ambitious ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’ from Kanyakumari to Kashmir can also achieve the objective of “Congress Jodo” and help in its revival, senior leader Shashi Tharoor said on Tuesday amidst churning in the party triggered by dissent and exits.

    Tharoor, who is said to be contemplating running for the post of Congress president, also expressed hope that many leaders would contest the upcoming elections and stressed he has neither ruled himself in nor out.

    In an interview with PTI a day before the launch of the 3,570 km-long ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’ from Kanyakumari to Kashmir, Tharoor said,”the message is also that the Congress is the party that can unite India and if the public is sufficiently inspired by this message, it will indeed inaugurate the revival of the party”.

    Asked about former Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad and BJP’s’ swipe that the party should undertake “Congress jodo” instead of “Bharat jodo”, the Thiruvananthapuram MP said, “Ghulam Nabi Sahib is a respected elder and I do not wish to comment on his specific remarks.”

    “But I will say that the Bharat Jodo Yatra could also unite Congressmen and women across the country around our values and ideals as well as around service to the people, by raising issues that matter to the people and showing them that we are fighting for them,” he said.

    “Then it could be both ‘Bharat Jodo’ and ‘Congress jodo’,” Tharoor said.

    Tharoor was among the group of 23 leaders who wrote to party chief Sonia Gandhi in 2020 seeking large-scale organizational reforms.

    His remarks come amid repeated jibes by the BJP over dissenting voices within the Congress over various issues.

    Asked about the possibility of him running for the post of Congress president, Tharoor said,”I have only welcomed the fact that an election will be held. I believe that is very good for the party.”

    After all, which other political party has had an open election for its top post among such a large electorate of almost 10,000 voters, he asked.

    “Of course it is gratifying that this general statement of democratic principle has immediately led to large numbers of people around the country welcoming the prospect of my contesting. But as I have made it clear, I have not declared my candidacy,” Tharoor said.

    Pointing out that the notification of such an election is only happening on September 22, he said it means colleagues still have three weeks to think about whether they would like to join the fray.

    “I hope many will contest in order to give the membership a wide choice. So far I have neither ruled myself in nor ruled myself out,” the former Union minister asserted.

    The process for filing nominations for the election will be held from September 24 to 30.

    The last date for withdrawal of nominations is October 8 and the election, if required, will be held on October 17.

    The results will be out on October 19.

    Talking about the Yatra and whether it marks a decisive phase in the battle of ideologies, Tharoor said the battle is an ongoing one.

    “We have lost a few skirmishes but in many ways it is an existential struggle we are engaged in, to defend the idea of India enshrined in the Constitution. As long as we survive, there will be many other seemingly decisive phases,” he said.

    “But whatever happens, we should never surrender to majoritarianism,” Tharoor asserted.

    The ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’ is one important contribution to this ongoing effort, he said, adding that he doesn’t think the struggle for India’s soul will cease after the Yatra ends.

    Asked if the ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’ could have the same socio-political impact as BJP leader L K Advani’s Rath Yatra in the early 1990s albeit for a different cause, Tharoor said it is possible, but its impact can only be gauged as it goes on.

    “I hope it will attract large numbers of people to the ideals and values the Congress stands for, values that unite our people around the idea of an inclusive India,” he said.

    On whether the Yatra would get popular traction among the common people, Tharoor said no one undertakes such an ambitious nationwide march without expectations of success.

    “But while our planning and preparations have been thorough, it is fair to say that we cannot underestimate the ruling forces,” he said.

    “If they see the Yatra having a major impact I have no doubt about their capacity to distract the country in other directions. We should soldier on undeterred,” Tharoor said.

    On whether he sees the Yatra as a beginning of the party’s revival, Tharoor said he certainly hopes so.

    “While we are working with everyone, including other parties, non-political individuals and civil society groups, any such major activity undertaken by a political party undoubtedly has a political message.

    And that message is that we are the party that can unite India,” he said.

    Though the yatra will be formally launched at a rally in Kanyakumari on Wednesday, it will actually begin at 7 am on September 8 when Rahul Gandhi and several other Congress leaders will embark on the journey on foot.

    From Kanyakumari in Tamil Nadu, it will move northwards and pass through several states to culminate in Srinagar.

    THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: The Congress’ ambitious ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’ from Kanyakumari to Kashmir can also achieve the objective of “Congress Jodo” and help in its revival, senior leader Shashi Tharoor said on Tuesday amidst churning in the party triggered by dissent and exits.

    Tharoor, who is said to be contemplating running for the post of Congress president, also expressed hope that many leaders would contest the upcoming elections and stressed he has neither ruled himself in nor out.

    In an interview with PTI a day before the launch of the 3,570 km-long ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’ from Kanyakumari to Kashmir, Tharoor said,”the message is also that the Congress is the party that can unite India and if the public is sufficiently inspired by this message, it will indeed inaugurate the revival of the party”.

    Asked about former Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad and BJP’s’ swipe that the party should undertake “Congress jodo” instead of “Bharat jodo”, the Thiruvananthapuram MP said, “Ghulam Nabi Sahib is a respected elder and I do not wish to comment on his specific remarks.”

    “But I will say that the Bharat Jodo Yatra could also unite Congressmen and women across the country around our values and ideals as well as around service to the people, by raising issues that matter to the people and showing them that we are fighting for them,” he said.

    “Then it could be both ‘Bharat Jodo’ and ‘Congress jodo’,” Tharoor said.

    Tharoor was among the group of 23 leaders who wrote to party chief Sonia Gandhi in 2020 seeking large-scale organizational reforms.

    His remarks come amid repeated jibes by the BJP over dissenting voices within the Congress over various issues.

    Asked about the possibility of him running for the post of Congress president, Tharoor said,”I have only welcomed the fact that an election will be held. I believe that is very good for the party.”

    After all, which other political party has had an open election for its top post among such a large electorate of almost 10,000 voters, he asked.

    “Of course it is gratifying that this general statement of democratic principle has immediately led to large numbers of people around the country welcoming the prospect of my contesting. But as I have made it clear, I have not declared my candidacy,” Tharoor said.

    Pointing out that the notification of such an election is only happening on September 22, he said it means colleagues still have three weeks to think about whether they would like to join the fray.

    “I hope many will contest in order to give the membership a wide choice. So far I have neither ruled myself in nor ruled myself out,” the former Union minister asserted.

    The process for filing nominations for the election will be held from September 24 to 30.

    The last date for withdrawal of nominations is October 8 and the election, if required, will be held on October 17.

    The results will be out on October 19.

    Talking about the Yatra and whether it marks a decisive phase in the battle of ideologies, Tharoor said the battle is an ongoing one.

    “We have lost a few skirmishes but in many ways it is an existential struggle we are engaged in, to defend the idea of India enshrined in the Constitution. As long as we survive, there will be many other seemingly decisive phases,” he said.

    “But whatever happens, we should never surrender to majoritarianism,” Tharoor asserted.

    The ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’ is one important contribution to this ongoing effort, he said, adding that he doesn’t think the struggle for India’s soul will cease after the Yatra ends.

    Asked if the ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’ could have the same socio-political impact as BJP leader L K Advani’s Rath Yatra in the early 1990s albeit for a different cause, Tharoor said it is possible, but its impact can only be gauged as it goes on.

    “I hope it will attract large numbers of people to the ideals and values the Congress stands for, values that unite our people around the idea of an inclusive India,” he said.

    On whether the Yatra would get popular traction among the common people, Tharoor said no one undertakes such an ambitious nationwide march without expectations of success.

    “But while our planning and preparations have been thorough, it is fair to say that we cannot underestimate the ruling forces,” he said.

    “If they see the Yatra having a major impact I have no doubt about their capacity to distract the country in other directions. We should soldier on undeterred,” Tharoor said.

    On whether he sees the Yatra as a beginning of the party’s revival, Tharoor said he certainly hopes so.

    “While we are working with everyone, including other parties, non-political individuals and civil society groups, any such major activity undertaken by a political party undoubtedly has a political message.

    And that message is that we are the party that can unite India,” he said.

    Though the yatra will be formally launched at a rally in Kanyakumari on Wednesday, it will actually begin at 7 am on September 8 when Rahul Gandhi and several other Congress leaders will embark on the journey on foot.

    From Kanyakumari in Tamil Nadu, it will move northwards and pass through several states to culminate in Srinagar.

  • ‘Tharoor contemplating contesting for Congress chief’s post, to take final call soon’: Sources

    While Tharoor declined to comment on whether he would throw his hat into the ring, he has written an article for the Malayalam daily Mathrubhumi in which he called for a 'free and fair' election.

  • ‘High time PM breaks silence on proliferation of Islamophobic incidents’: Tharoor

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: Amid outrage over the controversial remarks on Prophet Mohammad by the BJP’s now-sacked two functionaries, Congress leader Shashi Tharoor on Sunday said it is high time Prime Minister Narendra Modi broke his silence on the “proliferation of hate speech and Islamophobic incidents” in the country, asserting that his silence is interpreted by some as condoning what has been happening.

    In an interview with PTI, Tharoor said the irony is that in recent years the Indian government has taken “impressive steps” to strengthen relations with Islamic countries, but that risks being “seriously undermined”.

    The former Union minister also weighed in on the ongoing debate on the need for blasphemy laws in the country, and said he is not a fan of such laws because the history of such laws elsewhere is littered with their misuse and abuse.

    “The existence of a blasphemy law tends to encourage both excessive frivolous litigation and mob misconduct by those who take the law into their own hands. I think our current hate speech laws and Section 295A are quite adequate to deal with such misbehaviour,” Tharoor said.

    The issue is of the willingness of the police and local authorities to enforce the law, without fear or favour, against whoever violates it, he said.

    “Exemplary action against any and all offenders will have a salutary effect in reducing such cases in future,” the Lok Sabha MP from Thiruvananthapuram said.

    Asked about the outrage and condemnation from a number of Muslim-majority nations over the controversial remarks on Prophet Mohammad and calls that Prime Minister Modi should have intervened in the matter when the comments were made, Tharoor said, “I believe it is high time the PM broke his silence on the proliferation of hate speech and Islamophobic incidents in our country, because his silence is interpreted by some as condoning what has been happening.”

    “I am sure he (Modi) understands that this kind of divisive rhetoric is undermining his own vision for India’s development and prosperity,” he said.

    Social cohesion and national harmony are a must for any nation to progress and grow, Tharoor asserted.

    “That is why, in the name of ‘sabka saath, sabka vikas, sabka vishwas’, he must publicly call for a stop to such behaviour,” he said.

    Asked about the impact of the row over diplomacy and foreign policy, Tharoor said the irony is that in recent years the Indian government has taken impressive steps to strengthen relations with Islamic countries, especially in the Gulf.

    “That risks being seriously undermined, as the media in these countries is replete with stories about the increasing ‘demonisation’ of Muslims in our country,” the former minister of state for external affairs said.

    The BJP had last Sunday suspended its national spokesperson Nupur Sharma and expelled its Delhi media head Naveen Kumar Jindal after their controversial remarks on Prophet Mohammad.

    Two persons succumbed to gunshot wounds in Jharkhand capital Ranchi and fresh demonstrations were held in West Bengal’s Howrah on Saturday as tension prevailed in several parts of the country, a day after the violent protests against the controversial remarks.

    On the protests, Tharoor said section 295A of the Indian Penal Code clearly makes it a criminal offence to outrage “the religious feelings of any class of citizens of India”; anyone who by ‘words, either spoken or written, or by signs or by visible representations or otherwise, insults or attempts to insult the religion or religious beliefs’ of Indians should have been prosecuted by the police.

    “I am glad to see that action is being taken, even if belatedly, against those who injected such toxic elements into our national discourse,” he said.

    Asked about the Congress being accused of peddling in ‘soft Hindutva’ in the past and if the party needs to take an aggressive stance on issues of the minorities such as the row over the comments on the Prophet, Tharoor said he believes the Congress has been clear in its denunciation of this recent incident.

    “We believe in an inclusive idea of India and should and must speak up whenever that idea is violated by word or deed — whoever does it,” he asserted.

  • ‘Proof of pudding is in eating’: Tharoor on Chintan Shivir outcomes

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: Describing the party’s Chintan Shivir as an exercise in reform and revival, Congress leader Shashi Tharoor on Wednesday said “the proof of the pudding is in the eating” and it remains to be seen whether the “process” will end up where many leaders wanted it to.

    Tharoor, among the group of 23 leaders who had written to party chief Sonia Gandhi in 2020 seeking large-scale reforms, said “reformists” at the end of the day wanted a more consultative process where a wide variety of voices would be heard and taken into account before decisions were made.

    “If such discussions occur in the proposed advisory council, the purpose would have been served,” he told PTI in an interview.

    But that remains to be seen, Tharoor added.

    “Our proposals like the revival of the parliamentary board and the idea of elections to the Working Committee were both intended to bring fresh voices to the table. The final decisions after such discussions would always rest with the leadership,” he asserted.

    Following the May 13-15 brainstorming session in Udaipur, Sonia Gandhi announced an advisory group drawn from the Congress Working Committee.

    She said it was “not a collective decision-making body” and would help her get the benefit of senior colleagues’ vast experience.

    Referring to the deliberations at the Shivir, Tharoor said, “Serious discussions were held in a constructive spirit amid much talk of change in the air. But whether it will end up where many of us had wanted remains to be seen.”

    “Let’s say a process has begun that still needs to unfold over the next few months. The cliché holds true: the proof of the pudding is in the eating,” the Lok Sabha MP from Thiruvananthapuram added.

    He said the issue of Rahul Gandhi as party president was not discussed to the best of his knowledge.

    While some of his colleagues certainly made such suggestions, they were not part of a structured discussion, the Congress leader said.

    “Still, there remains no doubt that Rahul Gandhi would be the preferred choice of an overwhelming majority of party workers. He has not indicated whether he wants the job.”

    “I suppose we will have to wait for the proposed AICC (All India Congress Committee) to settle that issue,” Tharoor said.

    On the issue of ‘soft Hindutva’, hotly debated at the Shivir, he said it is clear the party’s fundamental commitment to India’s pluralism and diversity is “non-negotiable”.

    “We have long used the word secularism for this, but secularism implies a distancing from religion, whereas we in India are deeply implicated in religious practices, customs, rituals, festivals and conventions. The Congress has no problem with its members showing respect for all religions,” Tharoor said.

    As an MP, he stressed, he goes to temples, churches and mosques in his constituency all the time – to temples as a devotee, to the others to demonstrate respect for the sacred beliefs of his constituents and fellow-citizens.

    “This may not seem very secular, but it is not ‘soft Hindutva’ by any means. Hindutva is a political ideology that has little to do with religion or the Hindu faith – it is a doctrine that preaches the supremacy of a particular cultural identity, in violation of the key Hindu tenet that teaches us the acceptance of difference,” Tharoor said.

    This kind of majoritarian politics is alien to the Congress, he asserted.

    Responding to regional parties such as the RJD criticising Rahul Gandhi’s remarks that they cannot fight the BJP-RSS as they lack ideology, Tharoor said he does not think any slight was intended other than to point out that their vision is by definition regional whereas the Congress is a national party with a presence in every district of the country.

    “My personal view is that all of us like-minded parties, both regional and national, will have to work together to take on the NDA in 2024. Otherwise, we will see an irrevocable transformation of India into an intolerant, narrow-minded autocracy led by a majoritarian-minded BJP,” he said.

    Asked about reform measures such as a collective leadership and a parliamentary board not being fully accepted at the Shivir, Tharoor said he was in the political committee and not privy to discussions in the organisation committee where such matters were dealt with.

  • ‘Quockerwodger’: Congress leader Shashi Tharoor’s latest head-scratcher for Twitter lexicon

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: Congress leader Shashi Tharoor, known for throwing in rarely-used, often difficult-to-pronounce English words into Twitter lexicon, on Wednesday posted another head-scratcher — quockerwodger.

    A useful addition to our political vocabulary!? #Quockerwodger pic.twitter.com/iGSCMY6tzA
    — Shashi Tharoor (@ShashiTharoor) April 20, 2022
    The man of many words helpfully shared the meaning too. “A quockerwodger was a type of wooden puppet.In politics, a quockerwodger was a politician acting on the instructions of an influential third party, rather than properly representing their constituents,” he said.

    “A useful addition to our political vocabulary!?” Tharoor added about the word he informed dates back to 1860. This is not the first time the author-politician-wordsmith has sent Twitterati scurrying for their dictionaries to confirm whether such a word indeed exists.

    Last year, Tharoor took a dig at the BJP with the word ‘allodoxaphobia’, which he explained was an irrational fear of opinions. Before that, the Congress MP engaged in a friendly banter with TRS working president KT Rama Rao over COVID-19 medicine names and threw in the obscure ‘floccinaucinihilipilification’.

    Oxford dictionary describes ‘floccinaucinihilipilification’ as the action or habit of estimating something as worthless. In the past, he has stumped people with words such as ‘farrago’ and ‘troglodyte’. While ‘farrago’ means a confused mixture, a ‘troglodyte’ means a person regarded as being deliberately ignorant or old-fashioned.

  • Kuch toh log kahenge: Shashi Tharoor’s reax to viral video of him in conversation with Supriya Sule in Lok Sabha

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: With a video of Shashi Tharoor in conversation with NCP’s Supriya Sule during Lok Sabha proceedings viral, the Congress MP on Thursday tweeted that she was asking him a policy question and he leaned over to hear her as she was speaking softly so as not to disturb the debate.

    In another tweet, he also posted lyrics of a popular song from Rajesh Khanna-Sharmila Tagore starrer ‘Amar Prem’ — ‘Kuch toh log kahenge, logon ka kaam hai kehna’, and tagged Sule.

    The video has gone viral on social media with many superimposing movie songs and taking digs.

    It was a great speech by Farooq Abdullah. Must listen for everyone. @ShashiTharoor pic.twitter.com/STQe0yulxG
    — Farrago Abdullah (@abdullah_0mar) April 6, 2022
    “For all those who’ve been enjoying themselves at @supriyaSule’s and my expense over our brief exchange in the Lok Sabha, she was asking me a policy question because she was about to speak next,” Tharoor said in his first tweet.

    “She was speaking softly so as not to disturb Farooq Sahib, so I leaned over to hear her,” the Thiruvananthapuram MP said.

    The video clip is from Tuesday when a short-duration discussion was held in the Lower House on ‘Situation in Ukraine’ and National Conference leader Farooq Abdullah was participating in the debate.