NEW DELHI, Mar 23:
Rahul Gandhi brought in the US style ‘Primaries’ with fanfare to empower grassroot leaders to fight the Lok Sabha elections.
But most of 16 constituencies under this experiment chose sitting MPs, senior leaders, their kith and kin or close associates, virtually defeating the purpose of the exercise.
The experiment witnessed several controversies in various States including in Delhi, Maharashtra, Karnataka and Madhya Pradesh on various counts including selection of constituencies and charges of bogus voting and use of money power.
What was hailed as a pioneering experiment in Indian politics turned out to be one that came under attack from cadres.
After facing a rout in Delhi Assembly elections last year, Gandhi announced in the AICC meeting in January that primaries will be held in 15 Lok Sabha seats on an experimental basis to give the grassroot workers a say in candidate selection.
The whole exercise began on a controversial note in Delhi, when Chandni Chowk represented by Kapil Sibal and North West Delhi represented by Krishna Tirath were put on the block only to be removed after the two protested.
Congress leadership was keen that candidates in at least two Lok Sabha seats here are chosen through the primary exercise in Delhi so that a candidate having the support of party cadres could be nominated to beat anti-incumbency.
The seats of New Delhi and North East Delhi, represented by former PCC chief Jayprakash Agrawal and Ajay Maken respectively, were chosen for the experiment.
Interestingly, Maken had a walkover because there was no rival. Agrawal swept the poll with 252 votes while his rival, an ex-MLA, secured only 47.
In Maharashtra’s Wardha, Sagar, son of Congress MP Datta Meghe, won the primaries by a slender margin of 46 votes over Charulata Tokas, daughter of the late Rajasthan Governor Prabha Rau. Sagar got the ticket.
The pulls and pressures in the faction-ridden Maharashtra Congress ensured that the constituencies up for primaries were changed thrice before they were eventually held in Wardha and Latur.
First, they were to be held for the Aurangabad and Dhule seats but candidates here came to blows and Congress leaders here openly opposed the idea. Then Yavatmal was selected and dropped quickly.
Tempers also ran high in Madhya Pradesh where Meenakshi Natarajan won securing 706 votes. Her rival candidate Surendra Sethi, a local leader, who got only 50 votes accused Natarjan of “rigging by adding fake voters”.
Former Union Minister Janardhan Poojary (76) bagged the Dakshin Kannada seat in Karnataka, defeating U K Monu by 478 to 62 votes in another straight fight in the primaries. This was only after the nomination of Petroleum Minister M Veerappa Moily’s son Harsha was rejected.
Congress MLA from Palitana Pravin Rathod won the primaries from Bhavnagar Lok Sabha seat in Gujarat. As many as 562 votes were cast Rathod polled 303 likes, while three other candidates managed to get almost less than half of these votes together.
Congress leaders, however, refuse to accept that the selection of sitting candidates through primaries in any way defeats the very idea saying the purpose of primaries is not to replace candidates in these seats but to ensure that only a candidate having the support of party cadres is chosen.
“Sitting candidates clearing primaries indicate that they have the support of party cadres,” a senior party leader said.
However, there is also a section of leaders, who believe that the experiment of primaries in seats held by the party is not logical and puts a kind of no trust in MPs even before they fight elections.
“This is fine in those seats, where you do not have a sitting MP so that you can get the best candidate available or in seats where there are already indications of strong resentment against sitting MPs and chances that they could lose. But implementing primaries in a blanket manner across all seats could be counter productive,” another party leader, who chose anonymity said.
Gandhi had promised to implement this experiment across the country in future depending upon its success in the pilot project. Many within the party feel that since most of the voters in primaries are local Congress workers, these could intensify infighting and groupism.
Some say that while the concept is welcome, they question its timing noting that it could potentially lead to a bitter battle between rival supporters when Lok Sabha elections are near. They felt that the exercise should have been conducted six months back. Charges of use of money power as also fake voters were voiced privately.
Under the primary exercise a representative cross-section of party workers, leaders and other influences, satisfying certain criteria, from these Lok Sabhas decide the Congress candidate from their constituency by participating in a simple voting process.
The AICC had said that Primaries are one of the many ways by which a political party can decide its candidate for an upcoming election. It is a system which allows for a broader participation of party supporters in deciding who should be a candidate from their constituency from that party.
“It makes the ticket allotment process fair and more transparent. The Congress party is the first national party to bring in such a process in India,” it claims. (AGENCIES)