The Congress, at the end of a nearly seven-hour long meeting of its working committee on Monday, decided that Sonia Gandhi will continue as the interim president till the next AICC session. In a briefing, senior Congress leaders Randeep Singh Surjewala and KC Venugopal said that the CWC has requested Sonia to continue as the interim president till the next AICC session could be convened and decided to form a committee to help her in day-to-day functioning of the organisation.
The CWC also authorised the Congress president to bring about necessary organisational changes to tackle the challenges faced by the party.
The party further said the CWC unanimously resolved to strengthen the hands of Sonia and Rahul Gandhi in every possible way, while making it clear no one will be permitted to undermine or weaken the party and its leadership. The CWC, the party’s highest decision-making body. also resolved that inner-party issues cannot be deliberated through media or in public fora and all such issues must be raised within the party “in the interest of propriety and discipline”.
The next AICC session is likely to be held after six months and the party will elect a new president then, Sonia reportedly said . In her concluding remarks, she also said that she was hurt but bore no ill-will towards the leaders who had written a letter demanding sweeping organisational reforms in the party.
“We are a large family. We have differences and different views on many occasions. But at the end we come together, as one. The need of the hour is to tackle issues facing the country. Organisational issues, process of constitution or reconstitution is a continuous process. I hold no ill-will for any party member. Keep the party together," she said during the meeting.
As many as
23 Congress leaders
, including Leader of Opposition in Rajya Sabha Ghulam Nabi Azad, party MPs and former Union Ministers Anand Sharma, Kapil Sibal, Manish Tewari, Shashi Tharoor had sent a letter to Sonia, calling for full time and active leadership, elections to the CWC and an “institutional leadership mechanism” aimed at the party’s revival.
Congress spokesperson Randeep Singh Surjewala also clarified that Rahul never made such remarks and warned against being misled by “false media discourse”. “We all need to work together in fighting the draconian Modi rule rather than fighting and hurting each other and the Congress,” he said.
Azad, who reportedly said that he would quit if the collusion charges against the leaders could be proved, later said that “some Congress persons” outside the CWC, not Rahul, had levelled the allegations. “Let me make it very clear that Rahul Gandhi has neither in CWC nor outside said that this letter was written at the behest of BJP,” he said.
Congress is finished, says BJP Ealier in the day, some BJP leaders including Uma Bharti and Madhya Pradesh chief minister Shivraj Singh Chauhan, attacked the Congress and said that it would never be able to save itself. “This is a party which is not ready to listen to truth, which terms those speaking truth as traitors, which terms those indulging in sycophancy as loyal…no one can save such a party,” Chouhan said. “It is heading towards destruction. If anyone speaks truth in the party, then it is alleged that they have colluded with the BJP,” he said. BJP leader Uma Bharti asserted that the dominance of the Congress was over. " The Gandhi-Nehru family’s existence is in crisis, their political dominance is over, the Congress is finished.. so who stays in what position hardly matters now… Congress should return to the real Gandhi, the real ‘swadeshi’ Gandhi without any foreign element," she told ANI. The letter sent by the Congress leaders to Sonia had triggered an outpouring of support for her to continue in the top post or for Rahul to take charge. Almost all Lok Sabha MPs of the party wrote to Sonia expressing solidarity and urging her to continue in her post or instal Rahul Gandhi. Several state units including Delhi and Rajasthan passed resolutions favouring the leadership of Gandhis. With inputs from agencies.
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