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regular-article-logo Friday, 26 April 2024

Mallikarjun Kharge is new Congress President, will be first non-Gandhi to hold post in over 2 decades

It is a great honour, huge responsibility to be president of Congress, I wish Mallikarjun Kharge all success in that task: Shashi Tharoor

Our Web Desk Published 19.10.22, 01:43 PM
Mallikarjun Kharge

Mallikarjun Kharge File picture

  • President is the supreme authority in Congress, whoever gets elected will decide on the way forward: Rahul Gandhi during Bharat Jodo Yatra in Adoni, Andhra Pradesh

Veteran party leader Mallikarjun Kharge was elected president of the Congress Party on Wednesday, the first non-Gandhi to head the party in two decades, after counting of votes in a nationwide election held two days earlier.

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Kharge, who defeated Shashi Tharoor in the election, is the sixth president in the party's 137-year-old history.

Karti Chidambaram, a counting agent for Tharoor, declared after the counting process was over that Kharge had won the polls with 7,897 votes and the Kerala MP had got 1,072 votes, according to NDTV.

Of the total 9,915 Pradesh Congress Committee (PCC) delegates that formed the electoral college to pick the party chief in a secret ballot, over 9,500 cast their ballot at PCC offices and the AICC headquarters on Monday

In a statement, Tharoor said the final verdict has been in favour of Kharge. He also conveyed his congratulations to Kharge for his victory.

"The decision of the party delegates is final and I accept it humbly. It is a privilege to be a member of a party that allows its workers to choose their president," Tharoor said, according to PTI and news television reports.

"Our new president is a party colleague and senior who brings ample leadership and experience to the table. Under his guidance, I am confident that we can all collectively take the party to new heights," Tharoor said.

Tharoor said the party owes an "irredeemable debt" to outgoing president Sonia Gandhi, for her quarter-century of leadership of the party and for being the anchor during our most crucial moments.

"Her decision to authorise this election process, which has given us new pathways to the future, is undoubtedly a fitting testament to her sagacity and vision for our party. I hope she continues to guide, motivate and inspire the party's new leadership team in overcoming the challenges ahead," Tharoor said.

He also thanked former president Rahul Gandhi and Priyanka Gandhi Vadra for doing their own bit to support free and neutral elections.

"The Nehru-Gandhi family has held, and will always hold, a special place in the hearts of Congress party members and with good reason too," he said.

The results will be officially declared in a short while.

Kharge would be the first non-Gandhi president in 24 years.

A senior Rajya Sabha MP from Karnataka, Mallikarjun Kharge is a long-time loyalist of the Gandhi family. He joined the Congress party in 1969. Kharge represented labor unions in his early career.

Belonging from the Dali community, Kharge was born in 1942 in Bidar district of the southern state. Kharge was a law student and from his early student life, he took an active interest in politics.

In 1972, the then Congress party chief in Karnataka, Devaraj Urs, convinced Kharge to contest from an upper-caste dominated constituency, Gurmitkal. He won that constituency nine times consecutively. Later, he contested and also won from Chitapur.

His rise to national politics began after the 2009 general elections, where he contested and won the Gulbarga parliamentary seat to gain entry to the Lok Sabha for the first time. Kharge won for a second time in 2014. He, however, lost to the BJP in 2019. In June 2014, Kharge was appointed Leader of the Congress party in the Lok Sabha. He was also the cabinet Minister of Railways and Minister of Labor and Employment at the Centre.

On June 12, 2022, the 78-year-old political stalwart was elected to the Rajya Sabha from Karnataka. He was appointed Leader of the Opposition in Rajya Sabha, a post that he resigned from on October 1, 2022 to contest for the presidential election of Congress.

Since Independence, the Congress has mostly been led by a member of the Gandhi family, who were elected unanimously. Elections were held only six times as there was more than one candidate - starting in 1939 when P Sitaramayya, backed by Mahatma Gandhi, lost to Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose.

Kharge was always the favourite candidate, widely believed to have the backing of the Gandhis. Now, his election will inevitably provide ammunition to critics, who allege the party will be remote-controlled by the Gandhis.

Kharge's rival in these party elections, Shashi Tharoor, however, maintained during the days of campaigning that the Gandhis had promised him to stay neutral.

Tharoor said he stood for change, something political observers believe the Congress needs urgently.

Tharoor alleged "extremely serious irregularities" soon after the counting of votes began on Wednesday. His campaign team member Salman Soz said they have raised "many different issues" with Congress central election authority chairman Madhusudan Mistry.

This election came about three years after Sonia Gandhi agreed to temporarily lead the party when Rahul Gandhi stepped down, taking responsibility for the two consecutive defeats of the party in the 2014 and 2019 general elections.

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