EC acting like captive puppet, front org of BJP: Congress

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

The today launched a scathing attack on the Commission, accusing it of acting like a "captive puppet" of the and not taking action against Prime Minister Modi who held what it called a roadshow in

In a no-holds-barred attack on Chief Commissioner A K Joti, the alleged he was behaving like Modi's principal secretary and said the poll body had prostrated itself before the


Addressing a joint press conference here, general secretary in charge of and communications in-charge Randeep Surjewala alleged that a "desperate prime minister facing defeat in Gujarat" held a roadshow with flags and flouted the Constitution and the poll code of conduct.

The EC was acting like a frontal organisation of the and had abdicated its constitutional responsibility by not moving against Modi, they said.

It should be "ashamed" of itself for not maintaining neutrality in the ongoing polls, the leaders added.

"A desperate prime minister facing defeat in holds a roadshow with flags, flagrantly flouts the Constitution and the code of conduct. A puppet Commission looks on with complicity denigrating its role of an independent arbiter," they said.

The Commission had also denigrated the Constitution, Surjewala told reporters.

"The Commission has become a captive puppet of Modi and the Unfortunately, the Chief Commissioner has abdicated his Constitutional responsibility," he said.

He claimed that Modi, facing imminent defeat in the Assembly polls, had latched on to the "last straw", the EC, to violate the Constitution and code of conduct, "in complicity and cahoots" with the Commission of India.

"A meek Commission is prostrating before the and the prime minister, refusing to act till the conclusion of the voting and that is the entire game plan and the conspiracy," he said.

Surjewala said the EC can register an FIR against channels and newspapers based on a complaint filed by the within 30 minutes but not act against the prime minister, chief Amit Shah and Union ministers.

"The ministers, the PMO and the chief minister were calling TV channels, threatening them that they would be all sent to jail," he alleged.

"It is a sad letter day for India. The Commission of India has denigrated the Constitution and abdicated its responsibility," he added.

This conduct, the spokesperson alleged, reflected the EC's "prejudiced and one-sided" approach and showed that it was acting like "a captive puppet of the BJP".

Mincing no words, Surjewala said while the CEC may have been principal secretary to the present prime minister and served as a civil servant in Gujarat, as a constitutional functionary it was expected that he and other Commissioners would act with neutrality and as an unbiased arbiter.

"If the EC is going to become a captive puppet, who will uphold the majesty of the That is why through the media, we are calling upon their conscience to at least wake up now and uphold the Constitution and not act as a subservient wing of the BJP," he said.

The EC, he added, was taking orders from the office and the PM. (He is) "sitting on a constitutional post but taking orders from the office and PM Modiji".

"We feel the Chief Commissioner who used to be PS to Modiji, though he has now on a constitutional post, is still acting as Modi's PS," he said.

Joti was principal secretary and chief secretary in when Modi was chief minister.

"In this country's 70-year history, the CEC-EC has shamed itself ... by acting like a captive puppet of the and the prime minister," Surjewala alleged.

The leaders demanded that if EC was concerned about its dignity, it should act against the prime minister.

The opposition party's strident attack against the Commission and Modi comes a day after the poll panel issued a show cause notice to president-elect Rahul Gandhi for "prima facie" violating the poll code by giving interviews to Gujarati TV channels.

The poll panel asked him to reply by December 18, failing which it would decide the matter without his response.

Surjewala alleged the rules were different for the and the media on the one hand, and for the prime minister and leaders on the other.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, December 14 2017. 17:36 IST