Monday, June 8, 2026
ADVT 
India

Congress Expels Jagmeet Singh Brar For ‘Anti-party Activities'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 11 Apr, 2016 12:35 PM
    The Congress on Monday expelled its senior leader Jagmeet Brar - who had recently commented that the AAP was gaining ground in Punjab -- from the party's primary membership.
     
    Congress general secretary and in-charge for Punjab affairs Shakeel Ahmed announced Brar's expulsion.
     
    "He has been expelled for anti-party activities. His actions and statements were against the party and its leaders," Ahmed said.
     
    The expelled leader had been attacking the Congress leadership in Punjab. He said recently that the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) was making gains in Punjab.
     
    Party leaders had urged the Congress high command to sack Brar.
     
    Brar is a senior leader of the party from Punjab and won the Faridkot parliamentary seat in 1992 and 1999. 
     
    He had defeated Sukhbir Singh Badal, now the Punjab deputy chief minister and ruling Shiromani Akali Dal president, in the 1999 Lok Sabha election from Faridkot.
     
     
    Brar was also a member of the Congress Working Committee earlier.
     
    Brar was suspended from the Congress in August 2014 after his outburst against senior central leaders over the 2014 Lok Sabha debacle. He quit the Congress in January last year.
     
    A senior leader from the politically dominant Malwa belt (south of river Sutlej), Brar was suspended after he said that the Congress brass must go on a sabbatical after the Lok Sabha election rout.
     
    There was strong speculation that Brar may join the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). But he was taken back into the Congress later last year.
     
    The Congress is facing an uphill task in the run-up to the assembly polls in Punjab. 
     
    It is pitted against the ruling Akali Dal-BJP alliance, which has been in power since 2007 in Punjab, as well as the AAP, which is emerging as a strong third force in the state.
     
     
    Akali Dal president Sukhbir Badal ruled out the possibility of Brar being accommodated in the Akali Dal.
     
    "He is a misguided missile," Badal told reporters in Amritsar.
     
    Punjab will see assembly polls in February next year. 

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Two schoolgirls hung from same rope in Assam

    Two schoolgirls hung from same rope in Assam
    Two schoolgirls were hung from the two ends of the same rope from a tree in Assam's Karimganj district, a killing reminiscent of the Badaun gang-rape and murder in Uttar Pradesh.

    Two schoolgirls hung from same rope in Assam

    14 killed in landside in Rajouri, thousands flee homes in flood-ravaged Kashmir

    14 killed in landside in Rajouri, thousands flee homes in flood-ravaged Kashmir
    Jammu and Kashmir continued to reel under incessant downpour which continued for the fourth successive day Friday across both Jammu region and the Kashmir Valley, leading to at least 14 more deaths in Rajouri while thousands abandoned their homes and fled to safety.

    14 killed in landside in Rajouri, thousands flee homes in flood-ravaged Kashmir

    India, Australia ink deal on uranium exports, to boost defence ties

    India, Australia ink deal on uranium exports, to boost defence ties
    India and Australia Friday inked a long-awaited civil nuclear agreement to enable Australia to export uranium to energy-starved India and also agreed to step up their political, security and defence cooperation as visiting Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott held talks with his counterpart Narendra Modi here.

    India, Australia ink deal on uranium exports, to boost defence ties

    Modi reaches out to 500-million-plus audience on Teachers' Day

    Modi reaches out to 500-million-plus audience on Teachers' Day
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi once again demonstrated that he is a man of the masses as he addressed millions of students and teachers across the nation and took questions from them in a first-of-its-kind live mass contact event on Teachers’ Day, striking a chord with them as he laughed and chatted and recounted events from his childhood.

    Modi reaches out to 500-million-plus audience on Teachers' Day

    Canada leading international effort to develop standards for 'flushable wipes'

    Canada leading international effort to develop standards for 'flushable wipes'
    OTTAWA - Canada is leading an international work group to come up with an industry-wide standard on so-called flushable wipes.

    Canada leading international effort to develop standards for 'flushable wipes'

    Modi's mass contact with India's students on Teachers' Day

    Modi's mass contact with India's students on Teachers' Day
    In the first mass contact programme of its kind, Prime Minister Narendra Modi will interact live with millions of young students and teachers across the nation...

    Modi's mass contact with India's students on Teachers' Day