Rahul Gandhi did not meet Scindia despite trying for “months”:Says Cousin
NEW DELHI : Jyotiraditya Scindia – known to be a close aide of Rahul Gandhi – had not been able to meet him despite trying for “months”, Pradyot Manikya Debbarma, erstwhile Tripura royal and a cousin of Mr Scindia, told to a TV Channel today.
The 49-year-old former MP from Madhya Pradesh, expelled by the Congress is set to join the BJP later this week.”I know for a fact Jyotiraditya Scindia was trying to meet Rahul Gandhi for months, no appointment was given.
If he (Rahul Gandhi) did not want to hear us, why did he even bring us in the party?” Mr Debbarma, the Tripura Congress chief who quit the party a few months ago, told the Channel this evening.
In a Facebook post earlier today, Mr Debbarma, who is known to be close to Mr Scindia, said: “I spoke to Jyotiraditya Scindia late night and he told me that he waited and waited but there were no upcoming appointments given to him by ‘our’ leader”.
“When I had resigned as the President of the Congress in Tripura, I had said that the young guard feels ‘orphaned’ and let down after Rahul Gandhi abruptly quit as the President and left us in a lurch. Suddenly our views were sidelined and the ‘Stalwarts’ had started to disregard our policies on key issues,” the post further read.
Rahul Gandhi had quit the party president’s post last year after the Congress’s disastrous performance in the Lok Sabha. With Sonia Gandhi subsequently in the driver’s seat, a renewed face-off had started between the party’s old guard and the young brigade which had gathered around Rahul Gandhi.
Speaking of the current situation, Mr Debbarma told : “A debate is seen as an act of dissension by the old guard. When our leader is not hearing us and the old guards are picking is off one by one, then it is time to move on”.
Mr Scindia was expelled from the Congress this morning shortly after he met Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah in Delhi. He is expected to join the BJP this evening, and is likely to be rewarded with a Rajya Sabha seat and subsequently a berth in the union cabinet.
The former Union minister, whose 21 loyalist MLAs have resigned, bringing the Congress government in Madhya Pradesh to the brink of collapse, had sent his resignation to the party earlier. In the letter addressed to Sonia Gandhi, dated March 9, he had said “This is a path that has been drawing itself out over the last year”. The party also did not give a positive response to his wish of getting a definite Rajya Sabha seat.
The top Congress leadership’s failure to reach out to him since yesterday, and the party veteran’s strong censure of his move, has raised murmurs of dissent from a section, which maintains that the Congress needs to act to reassure its young leaders and help them grow.”India’s oldest party needs to empower young leaders who have the capacity to work hard & resonate with the masses,” another tweet read.ndtv.