Why is the Congress silent and not responding to allegations against it by rivals?
February 5, 2015
What does low-key campaigning in Delhi imply for the Congress? On surface it appears as if a spate of poll reversals in recent months has seemingly pushed the party into an introspection mould. There is no blitzkrieg, no pomposity, no zeal to defend the continuous charges of corruption levelled against its leaders by the rival parties; and there have been only a handful of rallies by its tallest leaders – Party President Sonia Gandhi and her heir apparent, Rahul.
Does it mean that the grand old party is yet to formulate a definite strategy to recover from the recent defeats at the hustings?
Consider the pyrotechnics of its rivals – the Aam Aadmi Party and the Bharatiya Janata Party. Thus far it has been a no holds barred campaigning by both for the 7 February assembly elections in Delhi. Both, unlike the Congress, have shown no compunction in crossing swords with each other, even if it meant hurling abuses and accusations. A sample of this was the BJP’s CM aspirant Kiran Bedi filing a police complaint against the AAP’s Kumar Vishwas, her one time comrade during the Anna Hazare’s anti-corruption movement in 2012, for allegedly making sexist remarks against her; or the AAP leader Arvind Kejriwal apprehending “fake sting operations” by rival parties against the AAP!