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Business News/ Politics / Policy/  Delhi election result: Congress rout sparks wave of resignations
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Delhi election result: Congress rout sparks wave of resignations

Senior leaders Ajay Maken, P.C. Chacko and Arvinder Singh Lovely have resigned after the debacle

Ajay Maken on Tuesday resigned as general secretary of the Congress party. Photo: HTPremium
Ajay Maken on Tuesday resigned as general secretary of the Congress party. Photo: HT

New Delhi: The Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), which blew away the opposition in Delhi assembly elections, also had the Congress scoring a duck in what is the party’s worst-ever performance in the city, where it had been in power for 15 straight years before going out of office just 13 months back.

The Delhi election results was a shocker for the Congress, which had put its best foot forward for the contest by going for a leadership change and fielding its former members of parliament (MPs) and inducting a large number of new faces to turn the tide of anti-incumbency, which had cost it dearly in the 2013 assembly elections.

However, no strategy, including Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi’s roadshows to inject some energy into the demoralized party workers and early declaration of the names of its candidates, could work as all its leaders lost badly.

Stung by the humiliating defeat, the party’s face for Delhi polls, Ajay Maken, the Congress incharge for Delhi, P.C. Chacko, and Delhi Congress chief Arvinder Singh Lovely have all resigned taking moral responsibility for the debacle.

Maken, who was the Congress campaign committee chief, finished third in Sadar Bazaar. So was the fate of former Delhi minister Kiran Walia, who contested against Arvind Kejriwal for the New Delhi seat. Local Congress veterans fell like ninepins with most of them, including some former MPs and MLAs, finishing third.

The AAP also made deep inroads among the minorities, setting alarm bells ringing in Congress. In the last assembly polls, a large section of the community had remained committed to Congress with the result that five of the eight seats that the party managed to win had a heavy presence of minorities. Also, four of the Congress winners were Muslims. The seats in question—Ballimaran, Okhla, Mustafabad, Seelampur and Chandni Chowk—have all turned away from Congress this time.

Congress had fielded former MPs Maken and Mishra, both of whom lost with the latter biting the dust in his Dwarka stronghold.

Veteran Shoaib Iqbal, who had won the last elections on a Janata Dal (United) ticket and joined Congress days before the Delhi polls, also lost. Congress had touted his siding with the party as a major gain, saying it would send strong signal to minorities.

The prominent losers included Congress power minister and five-time sitting MLA Haroon Yusuf, who was the Congress legislature party leader in Delhi. Apart from Yusuf, other Congress MLAs like Hasan Ahmed, Asif Mohammad Khan and Chaudhary Mateen Ahmad, too, lost.

Breaking away with the past, the party had this time announced the names of its candidates for the polls much in advance. In fact, it was the first time in the party’s history that its candidates were named before the announcement of poll dates by the Election Commission of India (EC).

Former ministers in Sheila Dikshit’s cabinet, Raj Kumar Chauhan and A.K. Walia, who were defeated in the last assembly elections, had been given tickets from the Mangolpuri and Laxminagar seats, respectively. Both had represented their constituencies for four terms before they were defeated in the last polls.

Their luck had not changed this time.

Sitting MLAs Devendra Yadav, Jaikishan and Prahlad Singh Sawhney, too, lost while sitting MLA and Lovely had opted out of the contest and decided to work for the party instead.

A number of party candidates who had come second in the last assembly election were this time renominated in the hope that the party could benefit from their established standing, but to no avail.

Neither did its gamble of fielding President Pranab Mukherjee’s daughter Sharmishtha Mukherjee in Greater Kailash pay off for Congress.

The party also went populist this time and promised power tariff at the rate Rs1.50 per unit along with the right to shelter for the homeless. It tried to hard sell the development of Delhi like Metro services, CNG buses and flyovers constructed during Dikshit’s rule. But nothing worked for Congress while there was also criticism that while the party appointed a new Delhi chief, there was no organization in place.

Shell-shocked by the defeat, party leaders have given the call for the Congress to “reinvent" itself and revisit its “idealogical construct". There is also a muted admission within the party that internal dissension contributed to the pathetic show.

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Published: 10 Feb 2015, 07:11 PM IST
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