'Not about post, but country,' says Kapil Sibal after seeking organisational reform in Congress during CWC meet
After the meeting of Congress' top decision-making body, the CWC urged Sonia Gandhi to continue as its interim chief till an AICC session is convened

New Delhi: Senior Congress leader Kapil Sibal, who is among the 23 party leaders to have written to Sonia Gandhi seeking an organisational overhaul, said on Tuesday that "it is not about a post" but about the country that matters most".
A day after the Congress Working Committee (CWC) meeting, Sibal made the remarks in a cryptic tweet. "It's not about a post. It's about my country which matters most," he tweeted, without elaborating.
After the seven-hour meeting of the party's top decision-making body, the CWC urged Sonia Gandhi to continue as its interim chief till an AICC session can be convened and authorised her to effect necessary organisational changes to deal with the challenges facing the party.
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It made it clear no one will be permitted to undermine or weaken the party and its leadership.
The CWC also resolved that inner-party issues cannot be deliberated through the media or in public fora and all such issues must be raised within the party "in the interest of propriety and discipline".
Some senior Congress leaders, including Sibal and Shashi Tharoor, met at their senior colleague Ghulam Nabi Azad's house in New Delhi on Monday evening after the CWC debated their letter to Sonia Gandhi seeking urgent organisational reforms.
The meeting was also attended by Mukul Wasnik and Manish Tewari, along with some other signatories to the letter who were present in the National Capital, sources said.
The leaders discussed the resolution passed at the CWC meeting.
Having a "full time" leadership that is active in the field and "visible" in party offices, devolution of powers to state units and revamping the CWC in line with the party constitution are some of the far-reaching suggestions made by 23 senior Congress leaders in a letter to party chief Sonia Gandhi to revive the organisation.
Sibal had hit out at Rahul Gandhi on Twitter on Monday for a purported remark slamming the letter writers.
Sibal, who is not a part of the CWC, withdrew his tweet a little later after being "informed by Rahul Gandhi personally that he never said what was attributed to him"
The Congress also officially denied that Rahul Gandhi had accused any party leader of "colluding with the BJP".
Former president Rahul, it is learnt, launched a sharp attack against the signatories of the letter, questioning their timing as well as the fact they went public with their grievances.
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