Sonia joins the party!
Tara Shankar Sahay in New Delhi
The Congress on Thursday formally declared that Sonia
Gandhi had joined the party as a primary member.
Party president Sitaram Kesri, however, did not clearly explain
why the announcement was being made now when she joined the party on
March 21.
When journalists asked him the reasons for the delay, Kesri merely said
the delay was because the party's membership drive was
being completed before the organisational polls which will be
completed by the extended deadline of June 15.
Answering a pointed query, he asserted that Sonia
preferred to be an ordinary member of the party and, therefore,
the issue of her taking over the party leadership was irrelevant.
When another reporter persisted, Kesri rebuked him, adding
that anybody aspiring for posts in the Congress organisation
needed to be an active member first.
When asked whether he would renew his offer to Sonia
to be a member of the Congress Working Committee,
Kesri said, "it is entirely up to her."
However, Kesri did not categorically spell out that he was
renewing his offer. He reiterated that while he and other
senior party leaders had earlier requested her to join the party
and provide it with her guidance and wisdom, she had preferred
to be among the "crores" of primary Congressmen and
women.
When asked whether he would not personally ask her, despite
the provisions of the party constitution, to take over the party
leader's post, he said, "who am I to make such an offer
to Madam?"
Sonia's decision, despite the belated
announcement, comes as a jolt to Kesri's adversaries
in the Narasimha Rao and Sharad Pawar camps because it has
sent out the message that Rajiv Gandhi's widow is with the party chief.
Sonia had declined all invitations to join the party after her
husband's assassination.
Thursday's announcement is likely to deter party
dissidents like A R Antulay and S S Ahluwalia who
confronted Kesri on Wednesday and asked him why they were not
allowed to speak during the meeting of the Congress
Parliamentary Party. Antulay is being projected by the
Rao and Pawar camps as a likely rival to Kesri in next month's
election for the Congress president's post.
The timing of the announcement will also demoralise other potential
candidates for the Congress presidency. Kesri thus appears to have won a
reprieve to consolidate his grip on the Congress organisation.
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