A page from BJP playbook in Cong's peaceful K'taka switch
New Delhi, May 29 -- When Rahul Gandhi met outgoing Karnataka chief minister Siddaramaiah on Tuesday to give him the bad news that his time was up, it was done with sensitivity and attention to details. It was a one-on-one meeting where nobody else, not even party president Mallikarjun Kharge was present. Since it was just the two of them, no word about what transpired inside emerged, till Siddaramaiah himself shared it with his close aides. He told them that Gandhi had taken him into confidence and told him, "Come and join me to fight 2029, we will gain enormously from having you join our fight at the Centre."
Siddaramaiah found it difficult to say no to Gandhi.
There were other subtle changes in the Congress' handling of a mid-term change in chief ministers. The last time this happened was in 2021 when the party isolated its Punjab chief minister Captain Amarinder Singh then forced him to resign. He went out, publicly protesting his "humiliation" and then soon quit, walking into the BJP's arms. Contrast it with the images emerging from Bengaluru on Thursday afternoon: a smiling Siddaramaiah, accompanied by his proposed successor DK Shivakumar. The time and place of his exit was left to him -- the first confirmation of his exit came from Siddaramaiah, not KC Venugopal or Randeep Surjewala -- along with offers of sweeteners, including a ministerial berth for his son or accommodating his supporters. The man himself has said no to a Rajya Sabha seat.
As the longest serving Karnataka chief minister stepped down, he expressed his indebtedness to the party's senior leaders Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi, and AICC President Mallikarjun Kharge "who gave me the opportunity." This was a huge relief for the party's top leadership which knows the might of Siddaramaiah, who has not just spent 50 years in public life, but also commands a huge amount of goodwill with legislators and the public. This peaceful transfer was almost like those in BJP states, Vijay Rupani making way for Bhupendra Patel in Gujarat in 2021 and Basavaraj Bommai taking over from BS Yedyurappa in Karnataka in 2021. In all these moves, the BJP was able to orchestrate transitions without much fuss by keeping things quiet. While the Congress isn't there yet, Karnataka may be a sign that they are getting better. "It's not copying the BJP playbook, it's what the Congress always was,'' protested the party's Rajya Sabha MP Jairam Ramesh.
But change of CMs ahead of elections isn't the only aspect that the Congress seems to be borrowing from the BJP playbook. There's also an agility of decision-making that was previously not there, and which is identified more with the BJP. For instance, the party which is known for procrastinating decisions, took the decision to dump the DMK for the TVK, on results day itself.
"Rahulji made up his mind that very day to support them. He feels that Vijay will be a more popular ally ahead of 2029 and if he campaigns for the Congress, it will really benefit us. Not just that, they will also give us many more seats than the DMK ever did," said a Congress functionary, requesting anonymity....
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