Showing posts with label Congress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Congress. Show all posts

Saturday, September 07, 2013

Divided we fall

Instead of taking on Sheila Dixit, Delhi BJP leaders are busy settling scores. Anil Pandey reports. 

With Delhi assembly poll bound in November this year, the state BJP's tall claims about pulling down the 15-year-old Congress regime may be just that - claims.

Early indications suggest that there is no strategy – let alone a clear cut one – to take on the might of well entrenched Sheila Dixit and the Congress party in Delhi. With polls about six months away, the Delhi BJP presents a dismal picture of infighting. No district or block-level committees have yet been formed and the question of booth-level workers is plainly out of sight.

Even though the new president of the Delhi BJP, Vijay Kumar Goel, has announced his new organising committee after three-month-long messy deliberations, the new panel has left out well known party names in Delhi; instead what is in place are a host of unknown politicians, which leaders say, is is designed to demoralise party workers and ultimately take heavy toll on their election prospects.

“When the most basic committees are not in place, where is the question of the list of party candidates for the assembly elections? There is a lot of anger against corruption and inflation, as well as water and the power supply situation in Delhi. The mood is anti-Congress but the point is who will exploit it,” questions a BJP leader.

There is a reason why the Delhi BJP is unable to act: it is in the grip of vicious infighting and Goel who was nominated as the state chief on February 15, has not been to put an end to it. In fact, factional fights, if anything, have multiplied since his elevation.


In such a situation, Goel's own attitude has not helped. On May 14, he called a media meeting at the Constitution Club. Among the invitees were Arun Jaitley and Sushma Swaraj but those left out included the cream of Delhi BJP; Harshvardhan, veteran VK Malhotra, Vijay Jolly, Jagdish Mukhi and a host of other leaders.

Says one senior leader, “It is a bit surprising that in an election season, members of the party national executive are invited but not the state executive. It is tantamount to insulting senior leaders.” Such acts have earned Goel the epithet of SPS – a self projection schemer.

On the face of it though, party leaders say that given the mood against the Congress both at the centre and the state and the number of scams that are tumbling out by the day, Delhi will certainly see a BJP government this time. “Given Sheila Dixit's performance, we are returning,” exults BJP leader Vijay Jolly.

Such sentiments within the party have triggered off the race for the chief minister's chair; instead of helping matters, it has heightened the divide inside BJP. Says analyst Suvrokamal Dutt on Goel's organising committee: “It is good to introduce new faces within the party but in an election year to leave out trustworthy leaders who are well known, can be politically damaging. Vijay Goel has kept out all those agitating against the Sheila Dixit government.”

Among those ignored include Pravesh Verma, son of influential Jat leader, late Sahib Singh Verma, former party president Harshvardhan, ex-Delhi finance minister Jagdish Mukhi, veteran Mewaram Arya, popular leader Kirti Azad (even though he is an MP from Darbhanga in Bihar) and his wife Poonam Azad. It remains a formidable list of those who have neither been given any party work nor assigned any role in the elections.

In Delhi, Bihari and eastern UP votes plus Jat votes account for the maximum number of seats; of Delhi's 400 villages, 300 are dominated by Jats. Here Pravesh Varma would have played an important role but his claims have been overlooked. In east Delhi, youth leader Kuldip Singh Chahel, said to have influence among the young voters, has been marginalized. Similarly, 40 lakh voters from Bihar and eastern UP – known as purabias or easterners – could influence decisions in close to three dozen assembly seats in Delhi but they do not have a single representative in Vijay Goel's coordination committee.

In contrast, Sheila Dixit has gone out of her way to woo the purabia voter who in the last assembly elections was instrumental in getting the Delhi chief minister her third term. Dixit's team – in addition to herself – has many known faces. SK Walia is a force to reckon with in east Delhi while Arvinder Singh Lovely, despite the Congress loss in the Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Committee this year, has his vote bank among Delhi's Sikh voters intact. Central minister Krishna Tirath and Delhi's Raj Kumar Chauhan are solid Dalit leaders in their own right.

It is not as if there is no factionalism in the Congress: there are stalwarts like Sajjan Kumar, Jagdish Tytler, Ajay Maken and former DPCC chief Jayprakash Agrawal, all of whom are at odds with the chief minister. But Congress displaying more maturity, has refused to buckle down under one or the other faction, keeping everyones' interest in mind.

Rahul Gandhi during the course of his meetings has stressed on Congress workers ending their petty fights and putting up a joint front in the elections – those not doing so have been threatened with action by the party high command and it has worked. Says Subrokamal Dutt: “this is what Rajnath Singh should have done. After all, if BJP were to win back Delhi, it will be a great shot in the arm for the NDA in General Elections 2014.”


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2013.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles
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IIPM: Indian Institute of Planning and Management
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Rajita Chaudhuri-The New Age Woman

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Saturday, May 04, 2013

Ready for big-bang retail growth?

The government’s decision to liberalise FDI in multi-brand retail is being seen as a bold move to spur foreign investment in India. But allowing global retail giants in the country may not bring in the promised dividends.

Call it a coincidence but the underlying irony was hard to miss. On the same day that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh announced his government’s decision to allow 51% FDI in multi-brand retail – signalling a red carpet welcome for foreign supermarket chains – a Washington-based web newspaper carried a detailed story on how Wal-Mart, America’s largest retail chain, has been displacing nearby businesses. The irony was that all along in recent months Singh’s UPA government was fighting to dispel similar concerns being voiced by the Opposition as well as UPA allies on allowing global retailers like TESCO, Carrefour and Wal-Mart to set shop in India. After failing to rally support for greater FDI in muti-brand retail, the UPA government eventually went ahead and issued the notification for liberalising FDI rules in the retail sector on September 20.

What has followed since (apart from the exit of Mamata Banerjee-led Trinamool Congress from the UPA combine) has been a series of high decibel TV discussions and polarised debate over the pros and cons of FDI liberalisation in retail and how it will play out in India. On the one hand, we have the government and the Congress cheerleaders dubbing the move as ‘big bang reforms’. At the other end of the spectrum is the Opposition’s rhubarb decrying the move as retrograde and one which would spell doom for local kirana stores and render a huge chunk of our population jobless.

While some have argued that the government’s hurried push for reforms has been guided by the intent to divert the nation’s attention from the coal scam that saw the Congress-led government cornered, there are others that say that the latest push for reforms comes in the wake of the rapidly gathering perception about the government being stuck in policy paralysis. Reform votaries contend that allowing FDI liberalisation in retail will lay to rest the growing impression about the government’s policy inertia and will to bring in the much-needed foreign investment to India. But whether one chooses to call it a reform or a diversionary agenda, there is no gainsaying that this time around, unlike that of November 2011, the government is in no mood to withdraw its decision. So whether one likes it or not, FDI in retail is here to stay.

The politics that preceded or followed the decision to allow higher FDI in retail misses the key point. The crux of the matter does not lie in the kind of impact assesment that self-proclaimed pundits in the media, the government, the Opposition or the academia have been bruiting about. Also, the government’s defence that the move to allow foreign retailers in multi-brand retail will fix these issues is simply a case of wishful thinking and one that the policy fails to address. That’s because the bottlenecks that have impacted the retail industry in the past are likely to persist in the future as well.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2013.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
 
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles
 
IIPM’s Management Consulting Arm-Planman Consulting
Professor Arindam Chaudhuri – A Man For The Society….
IIPM: Indian Institute of Planning and Management
IIPM makes business education truly global
Management Guru Arindam Chaudhuri
Rajita Chaudhuri-The New Age Woman

ExecutiveMBA

Wednesday, November 07, 2012

24 Karat gold showcased

CPI(M) woos regional parties even before the divorce

The CPI(M) is planning a Third Front, minus the Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). The Left’s distrust of the saffron is well known, but its dump-Congress move has come as a complete surprise.

Though it is a coalition partner of the Congress-led UPA, the CPI(M) insists it will have nothing to do with the Manmohan Singh-engineered Indo-US nuclear deal. Picking Sunday – normally a quiet day for such “breaking news” – CPI(M) General Secretary Prakash Karat said that his party would ally with all non-Congress secular forces for “waging united struggles and joint actions on common issues.” He said this was because once parties win polls with Left support, they unilaterally embraced “neo-liberal” economic and foreign policies. Karat said in this there was no difference between the Congress and the BJP. The new Left democratic combine will seek to provide an alternative, so that a genuine common minimum programme can be implemented.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2012.
An Initiative of IIPMMalay Chaudhuri
and Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist).
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.
 
Zee Business Best B-School Survey 2012
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