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The leaders said that over-centralisation of the organisation and micro-management has always proven to be counter-productive, and that uncertainty over the leadership has “demoralised the Congress workers and further weakened the party”.
They were also critical of the way the Congress Working Committee, the party’s apex decision-making body, was being constituted and was functioning.
Highlighting the gravity of the challenges facing the party, they said that it was “imperative” to urgently establish an institutional leadership mechanism to collectively guide the party’s revival.
The letter talked about forming the CWC in accordance with the Congress’ constitution as well as reconstitution of the central parliamentary board and the central election committee.
According to the party constitution, the CWC shall consist of the president of the party, its leader in Parliament, and 23 other members, of whom 12 will be elected by the All India Congress Committee and the rest shall be appointed by the party president.
Elections to CWC have not been held since the 1990s and the Congress has been taking the ‘consensus route’ while choosing the CWC team.
The details of the letter written around early August by the leaders, who include former Union ministers, ex-chief ministers, former and current parliamentarians and senior functionaries, have emerged just ahead of the CWC meeting during which the issues flagged are expected to be discussed and debated.
The leaders are also learnt to have said that the CWC is not “effectively guiding” the party anymore in mobilising public opinion against the BJP government. They said that its meetings were “episodic” and convened in reaction to political developments, according to the sources.
They said that the party has witnessed a steady decline reflected in successive electoral verdicts in 2014 and 2019, noting that the reasons were manifold.
The letter stated that even after 14 months of the 2019 verdict, the Congress party has not undertaken “honest introspection” to analyse the reasons for its continued decline.
It also said that in recent years the institutional process of “merit-based and consensus-backed selection has been disrupted”.
The letter, according to the sources, also disapproved of the introduction of elections in the cadre feeding organisations, NSUI and IYC, saying the move had created “conflict and division”.
The letter did not refer to Rahul Gandhi, but elections to the feeder organisations were his reform initiatives.
In the letter, the leaders are learnt to have also said that uncertainty over the leadership and the drift have “demoralised the Congress workers and further weakened the party”.
Giving a host of suggestions to revitalise the party and give party workers a “sense of purpose”, they said there is a need for a “full-time and effective leadership active in the field and visible and available at the AICC and PCC headquarters”.
They suggested that appointments of District Congress Committee presidents from the AICC should be stopped henceforth, and DCC presidents should be appointed from the state capital by in charge general secretary in coordination with Pradesh Congress Committee presidents, as per sources.
The top leaders are also learnt to have called for urgent constitution of the central parliamentary board for collective thinking and decision making on organisational matters, policies and programmes.
The leaders demanded that the central election committee be reconstituted comprising leaders with organisational background and active field of knowledge and experience.
The letter also stressed that the Nehru-Gandhi family will “always remain an integral part of the collective leadership” of the Congress party.
The leaders acknowledged the visionary leadership of India’s first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and asserted that his enduring legacy will always remain a source of guidance and inspiration for the Congress.
It said that an “environment of fear and insecurity has engulfed the country” and the Congress has a duty to rise to the challenge.
The group of Congress leaders said the party must take the initiative for creating a national coalition of democratic and secular forces and make an effort to bring on one platform leaders of political parties, who were once part of the Congress.
The signatories to the letter include Leader of Opposition in Rajya Sabha Ghulam Nabi Azad; former Union ministers Kapil Sibal, Shashi Tharoor, Anand Sharma, Manish Tewari, P J Kurian, Renuka Chaudhary and Milind Deora, and Ajay Singh.
Also among them are MP Vivek Tankha; CWC members Mukul Wasnik and Jitin Prasada; former chief ministers Bhupinder Singh Hooda, Rajender Kaur Bhattal, M Veerappa Moily and Prithviraj Chavan.
Former PCC chiefs Raj Babbar (UP), Arvinder Singh Lovely (Delhi) and Kaul Singh Thakur (Himachal); current Bihar campaign chief Akhilesh Singh, former Haryana Speaker Kuldeep Sharma; former Delhi Speaker Yoganand Shastri and former MP Sandeep Dixit are also among the signatories to the letter.
Watch Top Congress leaders write to Sonia Gandhi seeking collective leadership
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