Former Punjab chief minister Amarinder Singh with Rahul Gandhi. Credit: PTI
Despite the apparent suddenness of Captain
Amarinder Singh’s departure as Punjab chief minister, close observers of
the state’s politics could see the pressure building up against him for
almost two years. Ever since Harish Rawat assumed charge as the
Congress party’s general secretary in-charge of Punjab in September
2020, he had hinted on several occasions that the 79-year-old Amarinder
Singh should do a re-think on leading the party into the next elections.
This was three years into Singh’s second tenure and he had gone back
to his old ways of working. Running the administration through a coterie
of trusted bureaucrats, while he all but abandoned his office in the
civil secretariat and moved to a newly built farmhouse on the outskirts
of Chandigarh. The man who once chatted with students in roadside dhabas
and mingled with farmers during the election campaign, soon became as
inaccessible even to his ministers and legislators, just as it was in
his first tenure. His eroding political capital was also noticed as he
visibly lagged in the perception battle on religious issues and his
professed war against drugs.
Many would say that the Congress leadership – with Rahul Gandhi and
Priyanka Gandhi-Vadra increasingly calling the shots – might be holding
him to his words uttered immediately after the 2017 assembly elections
when he categorically said that this would be his last election. He reportedly said that the party “should nominate his successor during his tenure
for a smooth transition of his retirement from politics and that it
would be good to encourage new leaders”. “I don’t mind someone coming
and working with me, eventually taking over the reins before the next
elections. That is the right thing to do,” he said in an interview.
But less than a year down the line, the politician in him urged him to change his stand and Captain Amarinder Singh asserted
that he has no intention of retiring from politics because his work in
Punjab is not finished. On Saturday, soon after resigning from the post
of chief minister, his resolve to fight on and continue in politics
strengthened. “I will chart my next course of action after consulting my
supporters and well wishers,” he said, indicating that all options are open for him, even floating a new political outfit.
Satnam Singh Manak, a veteran Jalandhar-based journalist, said, “His
efficient handling of procurement, attending to the problems of farmers
and indirect support for the farmer’s agitation has definitely earned
him goodwill in the rural areas of Punjab. It won’t be incorrect to say
that he is today considered a better Sikh leader than the Badal family.”
The irony is, though he retains his image of a gentleman politician
and is also a favourite with the substantial ex-servicemen community of
Punjab, the Congress party sees him as a liability going in for
elections.
His initiative to include ex-servicemen in the administration through a scheme called Guardians of Governance
(GOG) endeared him to the veterans. “The Captain stood out as the
tallest and most committed political soldier in the country today. He
bolstered public respect and the stature of veterans in the country and
his ouster is a below the belt blow to the energy and morale of veterans
across the country,” said a dismayed Brigadier (Retired) Ashish Uppal
in Chandigarh.
Unsuitable?
But, party insiders hint at a couple of surveys that brought out his
unsuitability to lead the election campaign and these are said to have
clinched the decision to oust him. The decision to change the chief
minister was on the cards almost as soon as Navjot Sidhu was appointed
as the Punjab Pradesh Congress Committee (PPCC) president after removing
Sunil Jakhar.
With both the chief minister and the PPCC president out of the way,
the Congress reckons it could beat the anti-incumbency in both the
offices and go into elections with fresh faces. In this, the younger
Gandhis have tended to lend an ear to a new set of advisors, Prashant
Kishor being one. It is worth remembering that a few months ago, Kishore
on one of his rare visits to Chandigarh had told
Amarinder Singh that if he wants him to manage his election like he did
in 2017, he will have to fulfil the promises made to the voters in the
2017 elections.
There are those who argue that Amarinder Singh could have been given a
more graceful exit, but the truth is that in recent weeks, the outgoing
chief minister indicated that he won’t go down without a fight. So,
kicking and screaming blue murder it had to be. He wasn’t even invited
to a meeting of the Congress Legislature Party, which he technically
headed as the chief minister, leaving him with no option but to resign.
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In post-resignation interviews, he has lashed out at his bête noire Navjot Sidhu, widely seen as the architect of Singh’s ouster. Soon after, he called him a security threat
because of his “connections” with Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan
and Pakistani Army Chief Qamar Javed Bajwa, Sidhu’s strategic advisor
Mohammed Mustafa, a former police officer, threatened to “expose” Amarinder Singh’s own personal connections with Pakistanis, claiming he had “irrefutable proof”.
Punjab chief minister Amarinder Singh and state Congress chief Navjot Singh Sidhu. Photo: PTI
The mudslinging apart, there are umpteen scenarios that could play
out on the political landscape of Punjab in the post-Amarinder Singh
phase. Charanjit Singh Chinna is the new chief minister but his tenure may be limited as the state heads to polls early next year.
Either way, Sidhu is being groomed to lead the electoral charge and
he will have to prove his mettle. The Congress is clearly altering its
election dynamics in Punjab and part of the effort is to introduce a new
energetic face and to actively woo the Hindu community that comprises
some 40% of the population. The Congress knows that it owes its 2017
election victory to unexpected last-minute support from Hindus, who were
nervous due to the Aam Aadmi Party’s overtures to radical Sikhs
outfits. For four years, the party retained the amiable Sunil Jhakhar, a
Hindu as the PPCC president, before removing him to install Navjot
Sidhu. The party is known for its expertise in balancing caste and
religious interests and has indicated that this time around it is ready
to shed the ennui of the last few years and present bold new faces and
agenda before the voters.
Captain
Amarinder Singh’s exit may or may not benefit the Congress party in the
polls next February but it has opened up new possibilities in the
political scenario going ahead. The Congress has played its hand. It is
for the others to show theirs.
Chander Suta Dogra is a journalist and author.
source ; the wire
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