This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.

In Punjab Face-Off, AAP Seems To Have Fallen Into A Congress Trap

In Punjab Face-Off, AAP Seems To Have Fallen Into A Congress Trap
India's ruling Congress party leader Rahul Gandhi, right, speaks with former chief minister of Punjab state Captain Amarinder Singh during an election rally at in Chabal some 30 kilometers (19 miles) from Amritsar, India, Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012. (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri)
ASSOCIATED PRESS
India's ruling Congress party leader Rahul Gandhi, right, speaks with former chief minister of Punjab state Captain Amarinder Singh during an election rally at in Chabal some 30 kilometers (19 miles) from Amritsar, India, Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2012. (AP Photo/Altaf Qadri)

Did the Aam Aam Party yesterday fall into the trap of giving the Congress what it wants: moving the political discourse from everything else to the persona of Congress leader Amarinder Singh?

Leaders of the AAP, including Arvind Kejriwal himself, had a field day on Twitter; pointing out that Rahul Gandhi had refused to name Amarinder Singh as the party’s chief ministerial candidate for the Punjab assembly elections.

On Saturday, 16 April, the Congress vice president held an interaction with Congress leaders and workers on the outskirts of Chandigarh. Congress workers persuaded him to declare Singh as the CM candidate. When journalists asked him about this, Gandhi replied that while the Captain was the face of the campaign by virtue of being the sate Congress chief, the chief minister would be elected by the MLAs after the election.

In saying so, he seemed to be going back on what he had suggested in his previous visit to Punjab. In his visit in March, Gandhi had said the next Punjab government would be formed under the leadership of Singh.

So when on Saturday, Gandhi appeared to retract the declaration, it seemed like an embarrassment for the Punjab Congress, and for Amarinder’s campaign strategist Prashant Kishor, who had already begun projecting Amarinder as ‘Punjab da Captain’ in a presidential-style campaign.

However, it emerges that this was part of a well-orchestrated move to create a fresh controversy around the CM candidature issue, so that another day passes by with Punjab’s political discussion centred on the persona of Singh.

The media was suitably alerted about the event, even given hints that Amarinder Singh might be announced as the CM candidate. Gandhi deliberately gave a vague reply that would create a confusion, and would be picked up by the media and opposition.

Since not having a chief ministerial candidate is the AAP’s Achilles’ heel in Punjab, their asking questions on Singh’s candidature for the post makes them fall into the trap of turning this – the CM candidate question – more important than other political questions. The other political questions – such as Punjab’s drug menace or corruption or farm distress – are where the AAP as of now is seen as a more credible answer than the Congress.

The Aam Aadmi Party had until recently been focusing on projecting itself as the party that can solve Punjab’s problems, but it now seems to have fallen into the trap of shifting the political conversation to ‘who will be the CM?’

प्रश्न है कि आख़िर कोंग्रेस ने कैप्टन को क्यों हटाया? https://t.co/2WFRcyJAUu

— Arvind Kejriwal (@ArvindKejriwal) 16 April 2016

Rahul Gandhi makes it clear that there will be no CM face in Punjab. Captain does not even have Rahul's confidence. Captain has no chance.

— Durgesh Pathak (@ipathak25) 16 April 2016

The AAP may be jumping to conclusions too early. Within the next few weeks, sources say, the Congress is likely to make a formal announcement in Delhi, declaring Singh as the party’s official chief ministerial candidate for the February 2017 polls. “The announcement will be made in such a way as befits a chief ministerial candidate. It can’t be made in response to a question,” said a source familiar with the strategy.

The announcement will be made in such a way as befits a chief ministerial candidate. It can’t be made in response to a question.

Until such announcement is made, the Captain is meeting NRI Sikhs in the US. While he does that, the state Congress and Kishor’s Indian Political Action Committee are likely to intensify the “Punjab da Captain” campaign.

Kejriwal recently said in an interview with the Economic Times that his party would not declare any CM candidate for Punjab, and that the issue has not even been discussed in the party.

However, his colleague Sanjay Singh recently told the same newspaper that the party was planning to announce a CM candidate in 3-4 months and it won’t be Kejriwal.

Contact HuffPost India

Also see on HuffPost:

Will Kate In Mumbai

Close
This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.