Crisis in Congress deepens
Rahul Gandhi has spurned appeals to reconsider his resignation as leader of India's Congress Party after losing a second general election to BJP an aide said yesterday, as the party faces its worst crisis in a decade.
Stuck between a leader determined to quit and party officials unwilling to accept his leaving, Congress is effectively leaderless more than a month after its election drubbing and facing key state polls later this year.
Chief ministers from five Congress-ruled states went to New Delhi on Monday where they spent two hours trying to convince Gandhi to reverse his May 25 decision to resign.
"We told him our point of view, openly, in a long conversation," Ashok Gehlot, a senior Congress leader and chief minister of western Rajasthan state, told reporters.
"We hope he will consider our view and take the right decision," he said.
A close aide to Gandhi, speaking to Reuters after the meeting, said the 49-year-old was firm about stepping aside as Congress president, a position he held since succeeding his mother, Sonia Gandhi, in late 2017.
"He will never change his mind," the aide said, requesting anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to the media. "He feels that the way forward is not him continuing as Congress president ... and let somebody outside the Gandhi family be Congress president," the aide said, adding the party cannot "just depend on one person, one family".
Gandhi will remain in politics to help rebuild Congress from the ground up, the aide said, rather than stay on as leader due to his family's political lineage.
The Nehru-Gandhi family has dominated the party, and through it Indian politics for decades, producing three prime ministers, but Prime Minister Narendra Modi have accused Congress of promoting "dynasty" politics.
The Modi-led BJP has trounced Congress in two successive general elections, winning 303 out of 542 parliament seats in 2019.
Despite the defeats, Congress officials say they want Gandhi to stay because they fear the party may splinter without him.
"There is nobody else aside from him who can keep the organisation together," said a member of the party's top decision-making body, the Congress Working Committee (CWC), who requested anonymity.
"He will have to lead. There's no option," he said.
Congress does not have a clear succession plan. While the CWC has not begun the official process of finding the next leader, 68-year-old Gehlot is among the potential frontrunners, according to three other party officials.
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