Congress leadership must walk the extra mile to ensure that the credibility of their presidential election is not questioned

They should accept the demand made by a few senior leaders that the party make the electoral rolls for its presidential election public

The presidential poll comes in the wake of a section of the Congress turning sceptical about the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty’s ability to run the party or win elections.

The Congress leadership should accept the demand made by a few senior leaders that the party make the electoral rolls for its presidential election public. The Congress, long used to a nomination culture, has attempted to carve a new path, and probably enthuse cadres, by deciding to elect the party chief: The last time it held an election to the president’s post was in 1999, which Sonia Gandhi won by defeating Jitendra Prasada, while Rahul Gandhi was elected to the post unopposed in 2017. This is a small but important step that can further internal democracy and enthuse cadres in the country’s main Opposition party. An elected president, especially from outside the Nehru-Gandhi family, can also blunt the BJP campaign that the Congress is merely a family enterprise. In such circumstances, it is necessary for the Congress to ensure that the election process is held in a free and fair manner, and also seen to be doing so. It will also send out a message across the political spectrum, which, unfortunately, is crowded with outfits led by founder-chiefs who prefer to appoint family members to party posts and ministerships than allow leaders to emerge through internal elections.

However, the Congress’s Central Election Authority (CEA) has refused to budge on the matter citing absence of precedence. It has held that the presidential election is an internal matter of the party and the electoral rolls could be misused if rivals manage to access them. These are facile arguments. Leaders such as Shashi Tharoor, Manish Tewari, Prithviraj Chavan and Pradyut Bordoloi, some of them potential candidates, have a point when they insist that making the rolls public is an essential step to ensuring transparency in the election process. Also, the electoral college consists of about 10,000 Pradesh Congress Committee delegates and it is not an easy task for a candidate to reach out to each of them via the PCCs. The CEA would be doing the party a disservice if it continues to be intransigent on the issue and allow critics to question the fairness of the election process.

The presidential poll comes in the wake of a section of the Congress turning sceptical about the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty’s ability to run the party or win elections. Old-time family loyalist Ghulam Nabi Azad’s scathing criticism of Rahul Gandhi in his resignation letter is a severe indictment of the dynasty’s record in helming the party. The presidential poll, in the midst of the Rahul-led Bharat Jodo Yatra, is expected to settle the leadership question for now and mute the criticism of G-23 leaders. This would, however, require the Congress to ensure that the credibility of the poll process is not compromised. A failure could further damage the party and discredit its claim to lead the Opposition.

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First published on: 05-09-2022 at 04:30:53 am
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