Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
India

Jayanthi Natarajan Quits Congress, Attacks Rahul Gandhi

Darpan News Desk IANS, 30 Jan, 2015 01:29 PM
    Senior Congress leader Jayanthi Natarajan, a onetime party spokesperson who was considered quite close to former prime minister Rajiv Gandhi, Friday quit the party, sending shock waves through its political establishment. 
     
    She accused the party leadership, particularly party vice president Rahul Gandhi, of letting her down, especially during her term as environment minister in the previous UPA government.
     
    "I announce my resignation (from the party)," Natarajan said at a packed media conference in Chennai.
     
    Congress leaders were quick to defend Rahul Gandhi and party chief Sonia Gandhi and said they did not interfere in the working of ministers. 
     
    Natarajan has joined people like G.K.Vasan and B.S. Gnanadesikan of the Tamil Nadu Congress to quit the party after saying they felt slighted by the party's national leadership.
     
    She said: "I feel that the time has come now for me to rethink my association because what happened in the recent past. The Congress is no longer the Congress that I joined." She has been in the party for the last three decades and has been a four-time member of the Rajya Sabha. 
     
    Natarajan quit after writing a letter to Congress party president Sonia Gandhi. Her letter took the party including the Tamil Nadu unit by surprise but it sought to put a brave face. "The party will not be weakened by her absence," said Tamil Nadu Congress's chief E.V.K.S. Elangovan.
     
    Natarajan, who was asked to put in her papers Dec 20, 2013, by then prime minister Manmohan Singh, said: "(I) received several requests and representations from Rahul Gandhi's office to ensure that the environment is protected."
     
    "And according to these instructions...I did my duty. I had these projects investigated and some of them I stopped," she said and added that she got "specific inputs" from Rahul Gandhi's office. Natarajan said she has sufficient proof of Rahul Gandhi's specific requests on environmental clearance related to projects. "Let Rahul Gandhi refute it."
     
    It was however not clear why she waited so long to air her frustration and grievances, since she had stepped down from the government in December 2013 and it has been a good eight months since the general elections led to the fall of the Congress-led UPA government. 
     
    Congress leader and former union minister Veerappa Moily, however, said Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi never interfered.
     
    "...I have not come across any instance where the Congress president or vice-president interfered with administration," Moily told reporters in Bangalore.
     
    Congress leader Digvijaya Singh too said in Delhi: "...it is totally wrong that either Sonia Gandhi or Rahul Gandhi ever interfered in the functioning of UPA government. Ministers were free to take decisions."
     
    Grand-daughter of former Tamil Nadu chief minister M. Bhaktavatsalam, Natarajan hails from a family of Congress veterans who were associated with the Indian National Congress since its inception in 1885. 
     
     
    Her great-grandfather was a member of India's Constituent Assembly.
     
    A Chennai-based lawyer, Natarajan entered politics as a Youth Congress worker in the 1980s. She was later noticed by the then Congress president Rajiv Gandhi. She went to the Rajya Sabha for the first time in 1986.
     
    In a career that spans over 30 years, she has thrice been re-elected to the upper house of the parliament in 1992, 1997 and 2008.
     
    Natarajan, who was frequently seen on television, was dropped as a Congress spokesperson in January 2014.
     
    Natarajan said on becoming the environment minister, party president Sonia Gandhi had told her to maintain the Congress tradition of protecting the environment as was done by former prime ministers Indira Gandhi and Rajiv Gandhi. She was considered close to Rajiv Gandhi and was one of those who was present at Sriperumbudur in Tamil Nadu when Rajiv Gandhi was assassinated May 21, 1991.
     
    Despite withstanding the "anger and wrath of all the colleagues who protested that economic progress was being blocked", Natarajan said she was told to resign from the cabinet.
     
    A visibly miffed Natarajan said: "After the Congress, I intend to think about my life and future."
     
    "I have absolutely no plan to join any party," she said and added that no BJP leader has met her in this connection.
     
    She welcomed a government probe into environmental clearances given by her and demanded that the probe should be transparent.
     
    "I have to set the record straight to uphold the legacy of my family and my reputation. It has been a bitter experience for me for the past one-and-half years. My own party treated me badly," she said.
     
    "Why for a year everyone ruined my reputation and tarnished the legacy of my family," she asked. "I only followed the rules. Did not break the rules."
     
    Charging the Congress of letting her down by allowing her name and her family's name to be tarnished, Natarajan refuted that she had let down the party by not contesting in the recent Lok Sabha polls.
     
    "I was not in a condition to contest the Lok Sabha polls when my name, reputation and my family's legacy was being tarred," Natarajan said.
     
    Many senior Congress leaders from Tamil Nadu, including former finance minister P. Chidambaram, did not contest in the Lok Sabha polls. The Congress party drew a blank in all the 39 seats in the state.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    No talks with Pakistan unless they stop terror: Rajnath

    No talks with Pakistan unless they stop terror: Rajnath
    He denied media reports that he will be meeting his Pakistani counterpart on the sidelines of the sixth meeting of SAARC in Kathmandu....

    No talks with Pakistan unless they stop terror: Rajnath

    Punjab goes in for biometric office attendance

    Punjab goes in for biometric office attendance
    To ensure punctuality and discipline amongst public servants, the Punjab government will install biometric attendance devices in all public offices in the...

    Punjab goes in for biometric office attendance

    Modi leaves for Japan

    Modi leaves for Japan
    Modi and his entourage will touch down at Kyoto airport where Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will receive the Indian head of government....

    Modi leaves for Japan

    India, Japan sign Kyoto-Varanasi partnership agreement

    India, Japan sign Kyoto-Varanasi partnership agreement
    The partnership, which focuses on how to preserve heritage while building smart cities, was signed between Kyoto Mayor Daisaku Kadokawa and India's...

    India, Japan sign Kyoto-Varanasi partnership agreement

    One soldier killed in Kashmir army operation

    One soldier killed in Kashmir army operation
    One soldier was killed and another injured Saturday in an ongoing operation against separatist guerrillas by the security forces near the Line of Control...

    One soldier killed in Kashmir army operation

    BJP's Manoj Tiwari offered Vishwas Delhi CM post: AAP leader

    BJP's Manoj Tiwari offered Vishwas Delhi CM post: AAP leader
    AAP leader Sanjay Singh Saturday alleged it was BJP MP Manoj Tiwari who offered Kumar Vishwas the Delhi chief minister's post after the April-May general election this year....

    BJP's Manoj Tiwari offered Vishwas Delhi CM post: AAP leader