‘Party is the de facto fulcrum around which others converge’
New Delhi: Welcoming the recent “wave of Opposition unity”, Lok Sabha MP Shashi Tharoor on Sunday said the Congress will “de facto” be the fulcrum around which other parties converge, but asserted that if he were in the party leadership, he would not “crow about it” and encourage one of the smaller outfits to play the role of convenor of an alliance to take on the BJP in the 2024 general election.
In an interview with PTI, Tharoor said Rahul Gandhi’s disqualification from Lok Sabha following his conviction in a 2019 defamation case has generated a “surprising wave of Opposition unity” with many parties having begun to feel the truth of the adage “united we stand, divided we fall”.
The former Union minister also said, if most of the Opposition parties have now found a new reason to come together and stop dividing each other’s votes, the BJP might find it much harder to win a majority in the 2024 elections.
Tharoor said that regional parties traditionally opposed to the Congress in their states – AAP in Delhi, TMC in West Bengal, Samajwadi Party in Uttar Pradesh, Bharat Rashtra Samithi in Telangana, CPI-M in Kerala – have come out in his party’s support.
“Many have begun to feel the truth of the adage ‘united we stand, divided we fall’; if they don’t back Rahul now, they could be picked off one by one themselves, by a ‘vengeful’ government,” he said.
If the Surat court verdict gives India a more united Opposition, it could be bad news for a ruling party that won the 2019 elections with just 37% of the votes but more than 60% of the Lok Sabha seats, he contended.
Asked about Congress leader Digvijaya Singh’s ‘thank you Germany’ tweet after that country took note of Gandhi’s disqualification, Tharoor said he would have adviced his senior party colleague not to say what he did.
“The international attention – and the negative press for India – should not surprise Mr. (Narendra) Modi and his government. Doubts about the democratic credentials of this government have been growing for some years, as is evident from the global media,” he said.
“Still, I would have adviced my highly respected senior colleague and friend not to say what he did. It has always been an article of faith for the Congress party that we do not require or accept any foreign tutelage after 200 years of subjection to colonial rule,” Tharoor stressed.