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Between Capt camp and ‘neutral’ side, Bajwa isolated

After the two-day meetings of Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi with Punjab MLAs concluded on Tuesday, the state unit stood clearly divided into two camps — those in favour of former chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh and those who are neutral and owe allegiance to the party, not an individual. Between the two, state Congress chief Partap Singh Bajwa stood largely isolated.

Updated on: Feb 04, 2015 09:36 AM IST
Hindustan Times | By , Chandigarh
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After the two-day meetings of Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi with Punjab MLAs concluded on Tuesday, the state unit stood clearly divided into two camps — those in favour of former chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh and those who are neutral and owe allegiance to the party, not an individual. Between the two, state Congress chief Partap Singh Bajwa stood largely isolated.

PPCC-chief-Partap-Singh-Bajwa
PPCC-chief-Partap-Singh-Bajwa

Of the remaining 20-odd MLAs who met Rahul on Tuesday in two batches, the first comprised the young brigade from Malwa, most of whom belong to the neutral side, such as Bharat Bhushan Ashu, Kuljit Singh Nagra, Gurkirat Kotli, Parminder Singh Pinki and Randeep Singh Nabha. However, crediting Amarinder as a tall leader who cannot be ignored, they said the party should not be held to ransom by infighting and they would work with anyone the party appoints to lead them.

Even Randeep Nabha, an Amarinder detractor, said the former CM had a very high stature and should act like an umbrella for the party. “But the interests of the party should not be sacrificed before personal, vested interests,” he told Rahul, who reportedly agreed with the view that discord should end if the party was to regain power in Punjab. Sensing the mood, MLAs like Pinki, Balbir Sidhu and Jagmohan Kang too endorsed the view that the Congress needs to fight Badals and BJP, not each other.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Sukhdeep Kaur

Sukhdeep Kaur is an assistant editor with the Punjab bureau. She covers politics, social issues and special projects, including on-the-ground reporting during critical situations.

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