Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
India

Congress in self-destruct mode

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Oct, 2014 08:06 AM
    Perhaps the awareness about the irredeemable nature of the Congress's political fortune persuaded Prithviraj Chavan to let the cat out of the bag. By confessing, however, that he was powerless as the Maharashtra chief minister to probe the allegations of corruption against influential party members like Vilasrao Deshmukh, Sushil Kumar Shinde and Ashok Chavan, as well as a ministerial colleague, Ajit Pawar, the outgoing chief minister has drawn attention to the primary cause which is behind his party's decline.
     
    There is little doubt that it is the deliberate turning of the blind eye towards suspected acts of corruption which has fatally undermined the party's position. The Congress' reputation for aiding and abetting corruption first enabled Anna Hazare to whip up public sentiments against the party.
     
    Since then, its soiled image has been exploited in full measure by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which has buttressed its case by underlining Manmohan Singh's poor record in governance.
     
    But it wasn't only the former prime minister's seeming inefficiency resulting in a policy paralysis which hurt his government and party but also the palpable dalliance with fraud. As much was evident when, like Chavan, Manmohan Singh confessed his helplessness to act against dishonest colleagues because, as he said, one couldn't have elections every six months.
     
    The person whom the then prime minister probably had in mind when he made the comment was undoubtedly the telecom minister of the time, Andimuthu Raja. Nor is there any doubt at whose prodding Manmohan Singh allowed Raja to continue in office till the Supreme Court intervened and sent him to jail.
     
    It could not have been anyone other than the Congress's all-powerful president, Sonia Gandhi, who prevailed upon Manmohan Singh to let Raja remain in office if only because any step against him would have made the DMK withdraw support, leading to the government's fall.
     
    Sonia Gandhi must have been also behind Prithviraj Chavan's inability to act against Vilasrao Deshmukh and others lest the party be "decimated", as he said.
     
    In both the cases, a prime minister and a chief minister known for their personal integrity had to bow to unethical dictates from the powers-that-be and pretend to be oblivious of all the wrong-doing that was perpetrated under them.
     
    It is another matter that neither Manmohan Singh nor Chavan had the guts to tell those higher up in the party echelons that they could not wink at fraud and behave as if all was well. Had they done so, the fate of the Congress might have been different.
     
    After all, it was someone like V.P. Singh, whose refusal to close his eyes to scams led to him being hailed as Mr Clean and crowned as prime minister. Since then, there has been hardly anyone in the Congress who has had the honesty to admit that the party's sullied image is letting it down although former finance minister P. Chidambaram did identify ethical and governance "deficits" as the reasons for the downhill slide.
     
    Chavan is the first one to say that he could not "shed" his tainted party colleagues because "if I had sent them to jail, it would have hit the party organization". However, the irony is that the party has been "hit" any way because the belief that it is unwilling to act against the guilty is electorally damaging.
     
    The Congress paid the price, first, in the Tamil Nadu assembly elections in 2011 when its defeat along with that of its partner, the DMK, showed that the voters were not ready to forgive and forget.
     
    Since then, the party has lost a series of state assembly elections, notably in Goa, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh and Rajasthan, and now it is on the verge of defeat in Maharashtra and Haryana.
     
    There can be little doubt that the Congress's corrupt image is primarily responsible for the party's predicament. Strangely, its leadership appears blind to the writing on the wall. It still apparently believes that its socialistic pretensions, as is evident from Rahul Gandhi's criticism of Narendra Modi's pro-business policies, will help it cross the electoral Rubicon.
     
    The deafening silence from the leaders which has greeted Chavan's spilling of the beans is a tell-tale sign of what has gone wrong with the Congress. A party which was so quick to act against Shashi Tharoor for his praise of Modi is acting deaf and dumb when a serious charge against its functioning has been made by a senior functionary.
     
    It is not, however, difficult to understand the reason for its coyness. Like the decision to persist with Raja, the reluctance to act against Vilasrao Deshmukh and others could not have been taken without concurrence from the very top, viz., Sonia Gandhi.
     
    Yet, the party has seemingly convinced itself that it cannot survive without the Nehru-Gandhi family. Arguably, it has an idealized image of the family dating back to the times of Jawaharlal Nehru and Indira Gandhi when their names and appearances made the voters flock to the Congress's banner. This is no longer the case.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    News Analysis: In Modi era, little place for BJP seniors

    News Analysis: In Modi era, little place for BJP seniors
    They anchored the rise of the BJP in the 1990s and guided it through the tumultuous years in the opposition but do not appear to have a role in the party's first full-majority government....

    News Analysis: In Modi era, little place for BJP seniors

    19 Punjabis return from Iraq, no word on hostages

    19 Punjabis return from Iraq, no word on hostages
    Although 19 Punjabis returned to India by a special flight Tuesday, there is still no word on the whereabouts of another 40 Punjabi men taken hostage by militants in conflict-torn Iraq, officials said....

    19 Punjabis return from Iraq, no word on hostages

    Indian navy chief to visit Canada

    Indian navy chief to visit Canada
    Indian Navy chief Admiral Robin Dhowan will begin a four-day visit to Canada Tuesday to foster closer ties between the two countries' marine forces, an official statement said....

    Indian navy chief to visit Canada

    Pakistan violates ceasefire along LoC in Poonch

    Pakistan violates ceasefire along LoC in Poonch
    The Pakistan Army Tuesday opened unprovoked firing at Indian positions along the Line of Control (LoC) in Jammu and Kashmir's Poonch district, according to defence sources....

    Pakistan violates ceasefire along LoC in Poonch

    Decide on Delhi assembly's fate, SC tells Centre

    Decide on Delhi assembly's fate, SC tells Centre
    The Supreme Court Tuesday asked the central government to take a decision on the fate of the Delhi assembly which was placed under suspended animation after the AAP...

    Decide on Delhi assembly's fate, SC tells Centre

    44 Kerala nurses from Libya arrive in Kochi

    44 Kerala nurses from Libya arrive in Kochi
    The first batch of 44 Kerala nurses, evacuated from Libya, arrived here Tuesday morning, said a state government official....

    44 Kerala nurses from Libya arrive in Kochi