Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
India

Amit Shah elected BJP president for three-year term

Darpan News Desk IANS, 24 Jan, 2016 12:55 PM
    Amit Shah, a close confidant of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, was on Sunday elected the BJP president for a full three-year term, retaining the post he has held since the party took power in the country in 2014.
     
    Shah, 51, who took charge of the party in August 2014 from now Home Minister Rajnath Singh, was elected unanimously at a glittering event at the BJP headquarters attended by virtually all senior party leaders.
     
    As Bharatiya Janata Party leader Avinash Rai Khanna made the announcement that Shah has got the top post again, the packed hall erupted with joy, with young men repeatedly blowing conch shells and others raining flower petals on him.
     
    Hundreds of party activists cheered Shah and raised slogans hailing him and the BJP. Many garlanded or presented bouquets to Shah, who is seen as the most powerful man in the party after Modi.
     
    Modi was not present as he had to go to Chandigarh to meet French President Francois Hollande.
     
    But he congratulated Shah and said he was confident the BJP "will scale newer heights under his leadership".
     
    "Amit bhai combines grassroots-level work and rich organisational experience which will benefit the party immensely," said Modi, who is said to count Shah as one of his most trusted aides.
     
    Shah took hold of the BJP's reins from Rajnath Singh after the latter became the home minister in the Modi cabinet. There was no election then.
     
    Rajnath Singh said: "He (Shah) has been an extremely successful party president. I am confident the BJP will continue its forward march under Shah's stewardship and reach newer heights of success and glory."
     
    Another former BJP president, M. Venkaiah Naidu, said: "He is the most capable person. He has organisational ability, is a good strategist and is committed to (our) ideology."
     
    Besides Modi, the two other notable absentees from the event were former party presidents L.K. Advani and Murli Manohar Joshi, who are known to be unhappy with Shah's style of functioning.
     
    Shah, who did not address the gathering or speak to the media, leaves on Monday to address a public meeting in Howrah in West Bengal, where the BJP will face a stiff challenge in its bid for power this year. 
     
    The Congress was sarcastic. After pointing out the absence of Advani and Joshi from the event, Congress leader Kapil Sibal said: "Congratulations on his election, and congratulations on his future defeats."
     
    A science graduate, Shah -- the son of a businessman -- rose to fame when he, as the party in-charge in Uttar Pradesh, led the BJP to a grand victory in the state in the 2014 Lok Sabha battle where it won 71 of the 80 seats. An ally won two more seats.
     
    It was the general election where he and Modi combined to lead the party to a spectacular victory, ending 10 long years of Congress rule.
     
    Shah moved towards the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS) in Gujarat in his young days, and later took to student politics. 
     
    He met Modi in 1982, and the two have remained close since then.
     
    He joined the BJP in 1986 -- a year before Modi did. A four-time legislator in Gujarat, Shah was a home minister in the state when he was embroiled in a fake encounter case.
     
    He was one of those who helped the BJP grow and grow in Gujarat, reducing the Congress to a pale shadow of its original self.
     
    But his reputation as a strategic organiser took a beating when the Aam Aadmi Party routed the BJP in the Delhi assembly election in February last year -- the first popularity test after the Lok Sabha polls.
     
    The BJP was again defeated in the Bihar assembly election in November 2015. It was the Bihar defeat that triggered a revolt by some BJP veterans including Advani and Joshi against Shah's working style.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Kejriwal attacks Modi during Varanasi roadshow

    Kejriwal attacks Modi during Varanasi roadshow
    Surrounded by thousands of supporters, AAP candidate Arvind Kejriwal put up a show of strength here Friday, attacking his rival and BJP's prime ministerial aspirant Narendra Modi.

    Kejriwal attacks Modi during Varanasi roadshow

    CBI to probe Saradha scam, other ponzi schemes in Bengal, Odisha: SC

    CBI to probe Saradha scam, other ponzi schemes in Bengal, Odisha: SC
    In a setback to West Bengal government, the Supreme Court Friday handed over investigation into Saradha chit fund scam to the CBI saying that it would hold further investigation in all the cases including those where a charge sheet has been filed.

    CBI to probe Saradha scam, other ponzi schemes in Bengal, Odisha: SC

    Breaking Brahmin Monopoly: Hindu Temple To Have Women, Lower-Caste Priests

    Breaking Brahmin Monopoly: Hindu Temple To Have Women, Lower-Caste Priests
    Here's another traditional male bastion set to crumble. With a Supreme Court prod, the renowned 900-year old Vitthoba Temple in the pilgrim town of Pandharpur will script religious history when it appoints its first women priests as also priests from the backward classes as part of an inclusive mission.

    Breaking Brahmin Monopoly: Hindu Temple To Have Women, Lower-Caste Priests

    Sonia Gandhi's plane makes emergency landing

    Sonia Gandhi's plane makes emergency landing
    A private plane flying Congress president Sonia Gandhi was forced to make an emergency landing in Agra due to gusty winds and bad weather in New Delhi late Thursday, an official said Friday

    Sonia Gandhi's plane makes emergency landing

    Over 100,000 Indians studying in America

    Over 100,000 Indians studying in America
    With 113,813 Indians studying in America, India is second only to China with 290,133 students among more than a million international students enrolled in nearly 9,000 US schools, according to a new report.

    Over 100,000 Indians studying in America

    Judiciary, media best judges of 2002 riots: Modi

    Judiciary, media best judges of 2002 riots: Modi
    As far as the 2002 Gujarat riots were concerned, it is the judiciary, media and NGOs which should be left to draw conclusions, BJP prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi said.

    Judiciary, media best judges of 2002 riots: Modi