Why ‘Congress-mukt Bharat’ may not become reality NEW DELHI: “Congress-mukt Bharat banana hai …” When Prime Minister Narendra Modi declared this at a BJP national executive meeting in Goa in June 2013, it was meant to be a political slogan to galvanize party cadres for the 2014 Lok Sabha challenge. After all, the Congress then ruled 14 states and was in the ninth year of its rule at the Centre. So, any call for erasing the grand-old-party from the country’s political map could only be a political rhetoric.But then came the 2014 Lok Sabha elections and the BJP storm swept away the Congress at the Centre. The Congress was reduced to just 44 seats – its worst performance in history. And that was the beginning of a decline that gradually saw the Congress footprint in the country shrink dramatically. For a party that had governed India for decades, it was a civilisational shock. Yes, the Congress suffered humiliating electoral defeats. Yes, it faced leadership crises, defections, and repeated predictions of political extinction. But still, even 13 years after PM Modi’s call for “Congress-mukt Bharat”, the BJP could not wipe out the grand-old-party from the political map.Even at its worst, the Congress ruled three states, something which no regional party could ever achieve. That number has now gone up to 4, with the grand-old-party scoring a comprehensive victory in Kerala in the just-concluded assembly elections. The Congress’s decline had two dimensions – the decimation at Centre and the loss of states. To understand the path of the Congress recovery, one must first revisit just how brutal the decline was.The slide at Centre: How Congress fell to its kneesIn September 2013, when the BJP baton was passed on to the then Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi, the Congress had 206 members in Lok Sabha.In 2014, riding the Modi wave, the BJP stormed to 282 Lok Sabha seats decimating the Congress and reducing it to 44 seats. The number was so low that the Congress did not get the constitutional post of the leader of opposition in Lok Sabha.If 2014 was a humiliation, 2019 was meant to be the final nail. The BJP expanded to 303 seats while the Congress could only go up to 52, only eight more than its 2014 tally. It was still not enough to get the post of LoP in Lok Sabha. The drubbing raised fears that “Congress mukt Bharat” was not just a slogan but a prophecy in the making. And yet, within the party’s darkest years, the seeds of recovery were quietly being planted.The Congress joined hands with regional parties and became a part of a broad anti-BJP front. The plan worked and in the 2024 elections, the Congress almost doubled its Lok Sabha tally to reach the score of 99 and finally after 10 years could get back the post of LoP.The BJP, on the other hand, slipped to 240 seats, its first sub-majority performance since 2014 and PM Modi’s third term depended on the support of Chandrababu Naidu’s TDP and Nitish Kumar’s JD(U). Congress did not waste any time to remind BJP that the party that had promised to make India “Congress-mukt” could not form a government on its own.As Congress put it after the results, the election had been “a moral and political loss” for PM Modi. The trajectory, for the first time in many years, was pointing in Congress’s favour. The roller coaster ride in statesThe second dimension of Congress’s decline played out in the states across the country.In 2013, when the call for Congress-mukt Bharat was made, the grand-old-party ruled 14 states in the country. However, the 2014 drubbing triggered a decline which gradually saw the Congress slide dramatically to governing only 3 states.The Congress kept on losing states at regular levels. Fortunately for the party though, the grand-old-party kept on winning odd state elections to ensure that the party was never wiped out completely from the states.Rahul’s Bharat Jodo Yatra Rahul Gandhi’s Bharat Jodo Yatra in 2022, a 4,000 km padyatra from Kanyakumari to Kashmir, was one of the steps that perhaps helped the party reclaim some of the lost political ground. The campaign did not immediately translate into votes. But it did something arguably more important for a party that had lost its voice. It gave Congress a public face again. Rahul Gandhi, who had been caricatured by the BJP as a reluctant, distracted politician, emerged from the yatra with a renewed personal connect with voters. Picture credit: Uday DebThe electoral returns came the following year. In 2023, Congress won Telangana, ending K Chandrashekar Rao’s decade-long BRS rule and Karnataka, where it swept back to power on the back of sharp anti-incumbency against the BJP’s own internal chaos.Himachal Pradesh had already fallen in Congress’s kitty in late 2022, again on local anti-incumbency. So the party had three state governments in quick succession.The 2026 verdict: Congress footprint expands in southIn Kerala, the Congress-led United Democratic Front swept the state with 102 seats, its strongest mandate since 1977. Congress alone won 63 of those. The Left Democratic Front, which had pulled off a historic second consecutive term in 2021, was reduced to 35 seats. Pinarayi Vijayan resigned the same evening. For the first time in half a century, not a single Communist party governs any state. KC Venugopal had said in December that “many red fortresses will collapse.” They did.And while victory in Kerala was largely on expected lines, the Congress sprang a surprise in Tamil Nadu, where it dumped the DMK, an ally of 11 years, for a bold political realignment with Vijay’s TVK to remain on the winning side of the divide. Vijay’s TVK, which stormed the assembly with 108 seats, but failed to reach the magic figure of 118 in the 234-seat assembly, got immediate Congress support.The Congress has not been a dominant force in the state for decades where the Dravidian giants, DMK and AIADMK, have ruled since the grand-old-party was pushed to irrelevance.But the extraordinary post-election churn of May 2026 ensures that the Congress will be at the table.What’s next?Among the many states that go to polls next year, the Congress has high stakes in Punjab and to some extent in Uttar Pradesh – where it is in alliance with Akhilesh Yadav’s Samajwadi Party.Punjab assembly elections next year could be Congress’s biggest electoral opportunity since the 2024 Lok Sabha verdict to add one more state to its kitty. The Congress, which ruled Punjab from 2017 and lost the state to AAP in 2022. However AAP’s internal turbulence, leadership strains and governance pressures could create space for Congress recovery. The Congress, which remains the principal opposition party, would hope to reclaim the state.Whether it can convert AAP’s difficulties into its own votes depends almost entirely on whether it can resolve its chronic internal divisions and present a coherent alternative. That work is yet to begin in any serious way. Moreover, the road ahead for the grand-old-party would not be easy as the BJP has dropped enough hints of a very aggressive Punjab campaign.’Congress-yukt Bharat’The road ahead for the Congress remains an uphill battle. The small electoral successes notwithstanding, the grand-old-party still has a long way to go. The fact that some of the regional heavyweights like Arvind Kejriwal and Mamata Banerjee have suffered electoral setbacks, provides the Congress an opportunity to reclaim some of its lost political space in these states.The key question is whether Congress’s revival stems from a strategy or if it is merely benefiting from the mistakes of its allies and the BJP? For now, the gains Congress is making seem largely incidental and due to the groundwork of state leaders. It’s not due to episodic interventions of Rahul Gandhi. For its long-term revival, the party needs Rahul to be a full-time politician, focusing on identifying and grooming local leaders and smart alliance management at the state level.The Congress remains way behind the BJP, absolutely no doubt about that. But the reality is that the saffron party’s dream of “Congress-mukt Bharat” would perhaps remain just that – a dream. The grand old party is not what it was at its prime, but the country still remains Congress-yukt.About the AuthorPriyanka MukherjeePriyanka Mukherjee is an Assistant News Editor at The Times of India, where deadlines rarely slow down. Often juggling breaking news, long-form explainers and the everyday chaos of the newsroom, she is usually managing stress, chasing clarity and trying to log off on time (rarely successful). She also cares deeply about stories around women’s rights and social change, while two very opinionated dogs make sure she never truly switches off.Read MoreEnd of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosSuvendu Adhikari Chooses Bhabanipur Over Nandigram, Sparks Fresh Political Battle In BengalCM Vijay Revokes Astrologer Vettrivel’s OSD Appointment Amid Political Storm In Tamil NaduNEET-UG 2026 Leak Case Reaches Supreme Court, Petition Demands NTA Dissolution And Fresh ExamVijay Wins Tamil Nadu Trust Vote With 144 MLAs Amid AIADMK Split And Assembly ChaosKejriwal Targets BJP Over NEET Leak, Says ‘Gen-Z Can Demand Accountability Like Nepal & Bangladesh’FIR Against SP Spokesperson Rajkumar Bhati Over Viral Anti-Brahmin Remark, BJP Targets AkhileshAkhilesh Yadav Reacts To Prateek Yadav’s Death, Says “Business Losses Can Deeply Distress People”Air India Slashes International Flights | Why Ticket Prices Are Suddenly ExplodingPrateek Yadav Passes Away At 38 In Lucknow, Political Leaders Express GriefGovt Hikes Gold & Silver Import Duty To 15% | Modesty Push Or Economic Warning?123PhotostoriesHow to grow Dragon fruit in your garden: Simple step-by-step guide for beginnersFrom Mouni Roy to Dilip Joshi, Kapil Sharma and more: Highest-paid TV stars and their net worthFrom Bulldogs to Pugs: 5 surprisingly lazy dog breeds that love sleeping all dayRatan Tata’s ₹150 crore sea-facing bungalow ‘Bakhtawar’ is Mumbai’s most iconic legacy property; here’s who lives there nowHow to identify the St Lucia Racer: One of the world’s rarest snakes”Bus uska whistle ka problem tha…thanks to God main bach gai”: When to replace your pressure cooker to avoid any accidentAlia Bhatt just turned Cannes red carpet glamour into pure parampara with this ivory corset sareeDivorce rumours hit paradise: Who is Mouni Roy’s husband Suraj Nambiar? All about their whirlwind romanceHow parents can create an emotionally safe space for children at homeDua Lipa is suing a leading electronics giant for $15 million: 5 other celebrities who took global brands to court123Hot PicksCBSE class 12 resultUS Iran warPrateek YadavHaryana election resultForeign outflowNEET exam cancelledTamil Nadu assemblyTop TrendingNashik AstrologerTamil Nadu NewsIPL Points TablePM Internship SchemeIPL Match TodayHimanta Biswa SarmaIPL Orange Cap 2026Aparna YadavAir India FlightsPrateek Yadav

Why ‘Congress-mukt Bharat’ may not become reality NEW DELHI: “Congress-mukt Bharat banana hai …” When Prime Minister Narendra Modi declared this at a BJP national executive meeting in Goa in June 2013, it was meant to be a political slogan to galvanize party cadres for the 2014 Lok Sabha challenge. After all, the Congress then ruled 14 states and was in the ninth year of its rule at the Centre. So, any call for erasing the grand-old-party from the country’s political map could only be a political rhetoric.But then came the 2014 Lok Sabha elections and the BJP storm swept away the Congress at the Centre. The Congress was reduced to just 44 seats – its worst performance in history. And that was the beginning of a decline that gradually saw the Congress footprint in the country shrink dramatically.  For a party that had governed India for decades, it was a civilisational shock. Yes, the Congress suffered humiliating electoral defeats. Yes, it faced leadership crises, defections, and repeated predictions of political extinction. But still, even 13 years after PM Modi’s call for “Congress-mukt Bharat”, the BJP could not wipe out the grand-old-party from the political map.Even at its worst, the Congress ruled three states, something which no regional party could ever achieve. That number has now gone up to 4, with the grand-old-party scoring a comprehensive victory in Kerala in the just-concluded assembly elections. The Congress’s decline had two dimensions – the decimation at Centre and the loss of states. To understand the path of the Congress recovery, one must first revisit just how brutal the decline was.The slide at Centre: How Congress fell to its kneesIn September 2013, when the BJP baton was passed on to the then Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi, the Congress had 206 members in Lok Sabha.In 2014, riding the Modi wave, the BJP stormed to 282 Lok Sabha seats decimating the Congress and reducing it to 44 seats. The number was so low that the Congress did not get the constitutional post of the leader of opposition in Lok Sabha.If 2014 was a humiliation, 2019 was meant to be the final nail. The BJP expanded to 303 seats while the Congress could only go up to 52, only eight more than its 2014 tally. It was still not enough to get the post of LoP in Lok Sabha.  The drubbing raised fears that “Congress mukt Bharat” was not just a slogan but a prophecy in the making. And yet, within the party’s darkest years, the seeds of recovery were quietly being planted.The Congress joined hands with regional parties and became a part of a broad anti-BJP front. The plan worked and in the 2024 elections, the Congress almost doubled its Lok Sabha tally to reach the score of 99 and finally after 10 years could get back the post of LoP.The BJP, on the other hand, slipped to 240 seats, its first sub-majority performance since 2014 and PM Modi’s third term depended on the support of Chandrababu Naidu’s TDP and Nitish Kumar’s JD(U). Congress did not waste any time to remind BJP that the party that had promised to make India “Congress-mukt” could not form a government on its own.As Congress put it after the results, the election had been “a moral and political loss” for PM Modi. The trajectory, for the first time in many years, was pointing in Congress’s favour.  The roller coaster ride in statesThe second dimension of Congress’s decline played out in the states across the country.In 2013, when the call for Congress-mukt Bharat was made, the grand-old-party ruled 14 states in the country. However, the 2014 drubbing triggered a decline which gradually saw the Congress slide dramatically to governing only 3 states.The Congress kept on losing states at regular levels. Fortunately for the party though, the grand-old-party kept on winning odd state elections to ensure that the party was never wiped out completely from the states.Rahul’s Bharat Jodo Yatra Rahul Gandhi’s Bharat Jodo Yatra in 2022, a 4,000 km padyatra from Kanyakumari to Kashmir, was one of the steps that perhaps helped the party reclaim some of the lost political ground. The campaign did not immediately translate into votes. But it did something arguably more important for a party that had lost its voice. It gave Congress a public face again. Rahul Gandhi, who had been caricatured by the BJP as a reluctant, distracted politician, emerged from the yatra with a renewed personal connect with voters. Picture credit: Uday DebThe electoral returns came the following year. In 2023, Congress won Telangana, ending K Chandrashekar Rao’s decade-long BRS rule and Karnataka, where it swept back to power on the back of sharp anti-incumbency against the BJP’s own internal chaos.Himachal Pradesh had already fallen in Congress’s kitty in late 2022, again on local anti-incumbency. So the party had three state governments in quick succession.The 2026 verdict: Congress footprint expands in southIn Kerala, the Congress-led United Democratic Front swept the state with 102 seats, its strongest mandate since 1977. Congress alone won 63 of those. The Left Democratic Front, which had pulled off a historic second consecutive term in 2021, was reduced to 35 seats. Pinarayi Vijayan resigned the same evening. For the first time in half a century, not a single Communist party governs any state. KC Venugopal had said in December that “many red fortresses will collapse.” They did.And while victory in Kerala was largely on expected lines, the Congress sprang a surprise in Tamil Nadu, where it dumped the DMK, an ally of 11 years, for a bold political realignment with Vijay’s TVK to remain on the winning side of the divide. Vijay’s TVK, which stormed the assembly with 108 seats, but failed to reach the magic figure of 118 in the 234-seat assembly, got immediate Congress support.The Congress has not been a dominant force in the state for decades where the Dravidian giants, DMK and AIADMK, have ruled since the grand-old-party was pushed to irrelevance.But the extraordinary post-election churn of May 2026 ensures that the Congress will be at the table.What’s next?Among the many states that go to polls next year, the Congress has high stakes in Punjab and to some extent in Uttar Pradesh – where it is in alliance with Akhilesh Yadav’s Samajwadi Party.Punjab assembly elections next year could be Congress’s biggest electoral opportunity since the 2024 Lok Sabha verdict to add one more state to its kitty. The Congress, which ruled Punjab from 2017 and lost the state to AAP in 2022. However AAP’s internal turbulence, leadership strains and governance pressures could create space for Congress recovery. The Congress, which remains the principal opposition party, would hope to reclaim the state.Whether it can convert AAP’s difficulties into its own votes depends almost entirely on whether it can resolve its chronic internal divisions and present a coherent alternative. That work is yet to begin in any serious way. Moreover, the road ahead for the grand-old-party would not be easy as the BJP has dropped enough hints of a very aggressive Punjab campaign.’Congress-yukt Bharat’The road ahead for the Congress remains an uphill battle. The small electoral successes notwithstanding, the grand-old-party still has a long way to go. The fact that some of the regional heavyweights like Arvind Kejriwal and Mamata Banerjee have suffered electoral setbacks, provides the Congress an opportunity to reclaim some of its lost political space in these states.The key question is whether Congress’s revival stems from a strategy or if it is merely benefiting from the mistakes of its allies and the BJP? For now, the gains Congress is making seem largely incidental and due to the groundwork of state leaders. It’s not due to episodic interventions of Rahul Gandhi. For its long-term revival, the party needs Rahul to be a full-time politician, focusing on identifying and grooming local leaders and smart alliance management at the state level.The Congress remains way behind the BJP, absolutely no doubt about that. But the reality is that the saffron party’s dream of “Congress-mukt Bharat” would perhaps remain just that – a dream. The grand old party is not what it was at its prime, but the country still remains Congress-yukt.About the AuthorPriyanka MukherjeePriyanka Mukherjee is an Assistant News Editor at The Times of India, where deadlines rarely slow down. Often juggling breaking news, long-form explainers and the everyday chaos of the newsroom, she is usually managing stress, chasing clarity and trying to log off on time (rarely successful). She also cares deeply about stories around women’s rights and social change, while two very opinionated dogs make sure she never truly switches off.Read MoreEnd of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosSuvendu Adhikari Chooses Bhabanipur Over Nandigram, Sparks Fresh Political Battle In BengalCM Vijay Revokes Astrologer Vettrivel’s OSD Appointment Amid Political Storm In Tamil NaduNEET-UG 2026 Leak Case Reaches Supreme Court, Petition Demands NTA Dissolution And Fresh ExamVijay Wins Tamil Nadu Trust Vote With 144 MLAs Amid AIADMK Split And Assembly ChaosKejriwal Targets BJP Over NEET Leak, Says ‘Gen-Z Can Demand Accountability Like Nepal & Bangladesh’FIR Against SP Spokesperson Rajkumar Bhati Over Viral Anti-Brahmin Remark, BJP Targets AkhileshAkhilesh Yadav Reacts To Prateek Yadav’s Death, Says “Business Losses Can Deeply Distress People”Air India Slashes International Flights | Why Ticket Prices Are Suddenly ExplodingPrateek Yadav Passes Away At 38 In Lucknow, Political Leaders Express GriefGovt Hikes Gold & Silver Import Duty To 15% | Modesty Push Or Economic Warning?123PhotostoriesHow to grow Dragon fruit in your garden: Simple step-by-step guide for beginnersFrom Mouni Roy to Dilip Joshi, Kapil Sharma and more: Highest-paid TV stars and their net worthFrom Bulldogs to Pugs: 5 surprisingly lazy dog breeds that love sleeping all dayRatan Tata’s ₹150 crore sea-facing bungalow ‘Bakhtawar’ is Mumbai’s most iconic legacy property; here’s who lives there nowHow to identify the St Lucia Racer: One of the world’s rarest snakes”Bus uska whistle ka problem tha…thanks to God main bach gai”: When to replace your pressure cooker to avoid any accidentAlia Bhatt just turned Cannes red carpet glamour into pure parampara with this ivory corset sareeDivorce rumours hit paradise: Who is Mouni Roy’s husband Suraj Nambiar? All about their whirlwind romanceHow parents can create an emotionally safe space for children at homeDua Lipa is suing a leading electronics giant for  million: 5 other celebrities who took global brands to court123Hot PicksCBSE class 12 resultUS Iran warPrateek YadavHaryana election resultForeign outflowNEET exam cancelledTamil Nadu assemblyTop TrendingNashik AstrologerTamil Nadu NewsIPL Points TablePM Internship SchemeIPL Match TodayHimanta Biswa SarmaIPL Orange Cap 2026Aparna YadavAir India FlightsPrateek Yadav


Not dead yet: One state at a time — Why 'Congress-mukt Bharat' may never become a reality

Why ‘Congress-mukt Bharat’ may not become reality

NEW DELHI: “Congress-mukt Bharat banana hai …” When Prime Minister Narendra Modi declared this at a BJP national executive meeting in Goa in June 2013, it was meant to be a political slogan to galvanize party cadres for the 2014 Lok Sabha challenge. After all, the Congress then ruled 14 states and was in the ninth year of its rule at the Centre. So, any call for erasing the grand-old-party from the country’s political map could only be a political rhetoric.But then came the 2014 Lok Sabha elections and the BJP storm swept away the Congress at the Centre. The Congress was reduced to just 44 seats – its worst performance in history. And that was the beginning of a decline that gradually saw the Congress footprint in the country shrink dramatically. For a party that had governed India for decades, it was a civilisational shock. Yes, the Congress suffered humiliating electoral defeats. Yes, it faced leadership crises, defections, and repeated predictions of political extinction. But still, even 13 years after PM Modi’s call for “Congress-mukt Bharat”, the BJP could not wipe out the grand-old-party from the political map.Even at its worst, the Congress ruled three states, something which no regional party could ever achieve. That number has now gone up to 4, with the grand-old-party scoring a comprehensive victory in Kerala in the just-concluded assembly elections. The Congress’s decline had two dimensions – the decimation at Centre and the loss of states. To understand the path of the Congress recovery, one must first revisit just how brutal the decline was.The slide at Centre: How Congress fell to its kneesIn September 2013, when the BJP baton was passed on to the then Gujarat chief minister Narendra Modi, the Congress had 206 members in Lok Sabha.In 2014, riding the Modi wave, the BJP stormed to 282 Lok Sabha seats decimating the Congress and reducing it to 44 seats. The number was so low that the Congress did not get the constitutional post of the leader of opposition in Lok Sabha.If 2014 was a humiliation, 2019 was meant to be the final nail. The BJP expanded to 303 seats while the Congress could only go up to 52, only eight more than its 2014 tally. It was still not enough to get the post of LoP in Lok Sabha. The drubbing raised fears that “Congress mukt Bharat” was not just a slogan but a prophecy in the making. And yet, within the party’s darkest years, the seeds of recovery were quietly being planted.The Congress joined hands with regional parties and became a part of a broad anti-BJP front. The plan worked and in the 2024 elections, the Congress almost doubled its Lok Sabha tally to reach the score of 99 and finally after 10 years could get back the post of LoP.The BJP, on the other hand, slipped to 240 seats, its first sub-majority performance since 2014 and PM Modi’s third term depended on the support of Chandrababu Naidu’s TDP and Nitish Kumar’s JD(U). Congress did not waste any time to remind BJP that the party that had promised to make India “Congress-mukt” could not form a government on its own.As Congress put it after the results, the election had been “a moral and political loss” for PM Modi. The trajectory, for the first time in many years, was pointing in Congress’s favour. The roller coaster ride in statesThe second dimension of Congress’s decline played out in the states across the country.In 2013, when the call for Congress-mukt Bharat was made, the grand-old-party ruled 14 states in the country. However, the 2014 drubbing triggered a decline which gradually saw the Congress slide dramatically to governing only 3 states.The Congress kept on losing states at regular levels. Fortunately for the party though, the grand-old-party kept on winning odd state elections to ensure that the party was never wiped out completely from the states.Rahul’s Bharat Jodo Yatra Rahul Gandhi‘s Bharat Jodo Yatra in 2022, a 4,000 km padyatra from Kanyakumari to Kashmir, was one of the steps that perhaps helped the party reclaim some of the lost political ground. The campaign did not immediately translate into votes. But it did something arguably more important for a party that had lost its voice. It gave Congress a public face again. Rahul Gandhi, who had been caricatured by the BJP as a reluctant, distracted politician, emerged from the yatra with a renewed personal connect with voters.

bharat jodo

Picture credit: Uday Deb

The electoral returns came the following year. In 2023, Congress won Telangana, ending K Chandrashekar Rao’s decade-long BRS rule and Karnataka, where it swept back to power on the back of sharp anti-incumbency against the BJP’s own internal chaos.Himachal Pradesh had already fallen in Congress’s kitty in late 2022, again on local anti-incumbency. So the party had three state governments in quick succession.The 2026 verdict: Congress footprint expands in southIn Kerala, the Congress-led United Democratic Front swept the state with 102 seats, its strongest mandate since 1977. Congress alone won 63 of those. The Left Democratic Front, which had pulled off a historic second consecutive term in 2021, was reduced to 35 seats. Pinarayi Vijayan resigned the same evening. For the first time in half a century, not a single Communist party governs any state. KC Venugopal had said in December that “many red fortresses will collapse.” They did.And while victory in Kerala was largely on expected lines, the Congress sprang a surprise in Tamil Nadu, where it dumped the DMK, an ally of 11 years, for a bold political realignment with Vijay’s TVK to remain on the winning side of the divide. Vijay’s TVK, which stormed the assembly with 108 seats, but failed to reach the magic figure of 118 in the 234-seat assembly, got immediate Congress support.The Congress has not been a dominant force in the state for decades where the Dravidian giants, DMK and AIADMK, have ruled since the grand-old-party was pushed to irrelevance.But the extraordinary post-election churn of May 2026 ensures that the Congress will be at the table.What’s next?Among the many states that go to polls next year, the Congress has high stakes in Punjab and to some extent in Uttar Pradesh – where it is in alliance with Akhilesh Yadav’s Samajwadi Party.Punjab assembly elections next year could be Congress’s biggest electoral opportunity since the 2024 Lok Sabha verdict to add one more state to its kitty. The Congress, which ruled Punjab from 2017 and lost the state to AAP in 2022. However AAP’s internal turbulence, leadership strains and governance pressures could create space for Congress recovery. The Congress, which remains the principal opposition party, would hope to reclaim the state.Whether it can convert AAP’s difficulties into its own votes depends almost entirely on whether it can resolve its chronic internal divisions and present a coherent alternative. That work is yet to begin in any serious way. Moreover, the road ahead for the grand-old-party would not be easy as the BJP has dropped enough hints of a very aggressive Punjab campaign.‘Congress-yukt Bharat’The road ahead for the Congress remains an uphill battle. The small electoral successes notwithstanding, the grand-old-party still has a long way to go. The fact that some of the regional heavyweights like Arvind Kejriwal and Mamata Banerjee have suffered electoral setbacks, provides the Congress an opportunity to reclaim some of its lost political space in these states.The key question is whether Congress’s revival stems from a strategy or if it is merely benefiting from the mistakes of its allies and the BJP? For now, the gains Congress is making seem largely incidental and due to the groundwork of state leaders. It’s not due to episodic interventions of Rahul Gandhi. For its long-term revival, the party needs Rahul to be a full-time politician, focusing on identifying and grooming local leaders and smart alliance management at the state level.The Congress remains way behind the BJP, absolutely no doubt about that. But the reality is that the saffron party’s dream of “Congress-mukt Bharat” would perhaps remain just that – a dream. The grand old party is not what it was at its prime, but the country still remains Congress-yukt.



Source link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *