Old vs new: how the Congress chooses CMs
The Congress must strengthen its democratic processes while choosing CMs
Whether the Congress erred in privileging members of the old guard
to lead the governments in Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, and Chhattisgarh has
become a subject of debate. Those who argue that it missed a trick in not
picking Sachin Pilot and Jyotiraditya Scindia as Chief Ministers of Rajasthan
and Madhya Pradesh may well be right. These choices may have signalled a
readiness to be bold and break the old mould. But the real question to ask of the
party is how it arrived at the choice of its Chief Ministers. Members of the
Congress Legislature Party in the three States left the choice to Congress
president Rahul Gandhi, making a mockery of democratic conventions and
the electoral mandate. Although the Congress is not the only party that is
guilty of such practices, it has become something of a custom, mirroring the
leadership’s distrust
of developing strong regional leaders. In this case, the final choice may well
have reflected the wishes of a majority of the members of the CLPs of the three
States, but the Congress still needed to signal the all-powerful nature of the
office of the party president in the selection. Closed-door discussions and opaque
deal-making preceded
the final announcement of the nominees, to be elected “unanimously”
in another meeting of the CLP. In Rajasthan, the party opted for two-time Chief
Minister Ashok Gehlot, who had lost two elections, over Mr. Pilot, the State
Congress president. Mr. Pilot, despite his role in the campaign, did not have
the support of the old guard. His detractors like to point out that he did not
take the Congress to a comfortable majority, what Mr. Gehlot had done as the
campaign
spearhead in 1998 and 2008. But the Congress leadership has opted in
the end for experience over youthful dynamism. The compromise was in the form
of the deputy chief ministership for Mr. Pilot.
In Madhya Pradesh, the decision was relatively easy. It was
the president of the Madhya Pradesh Congress Committee, Kamal Nath, who fronted
the campaign. Former Union Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia had his fair share of
supporters, but it was Mr. Nath, who is far senior, who was perceived as having
a bigger claim to the post. Those in the Congress calling for blooding youngsters may well
have to accept the sober reality that this will only come about
as part of a longer, deeper process. Of course, it takes more than a change at the
helm
to bring about a political reorientation. The process will have to start at the
organisational level and extend to the distribution of the party ticket. To
allow the space for the party to grow, Mr. Gandhi needs to accelerate the
process of letting leaders from the grassroots to emerge. Youth leaders of any
significance today are of the second or third generation in the party. A good
way to start would be by decentralising power and not concentrating it
in the so-called high command, a feeble euphemism for the Nehru-Gandhi family.Courtesy: The Hindu
01. Erred (verb) – make a mistake, be wrong, be
incorrect; blunder.
02. Old guard (noun) – old member of an
organisation.
03. Mould (noun) – pattern, format,
model/structure.
04. Making a mockery
of (phrase) – make something to look foolish/absurd.
05. Conventions (noun) – protocol,
custom/practice, agreement.
06. Distrust (noun) – mistrust, suspicion, lack of
confidence.
07. Closed-door (adjective) – secret, restricted,
obstructive.
08. Opaque (adjective) – non-transparent, unclear,
mysterious/doubtful.
09. Preceded (verb) – go/come before (in time),
pave the way for, lead up to.
10. Detractors (noun) – critic, fault-finder,
censurer.
11. Spearhead (noun) – forefront, leaders, driving
force.
12. Calling for (phrasal verb) – require, make
necessary, demand.
13. Blooding (verb) – initiate, to give
experience.
14. Sober (adjective) – sensible/thoughtful; logical,
realistic.
16. At the helm (phrase) – in charge, in
command/control/authority; in the driving seat.
17. Decentralise (verb) – transfer of the
power/control of a department/government from a single place to other
locations.
18. Feeble (adjective) – ineffective,
unsatisfactory, unconvincing/weak.
19. Euphemism (noun) – polite/indirect term; a
mild or pleasant word or phrase that is used instead of one that is unpleasant
or offensive.
Note: All
meanings took from Oxforddictionaries.com and Google.co.in only.Like us on Facebook Follow Us on Twitter Join Us on Telegram
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