New Delhi. The Congress party’s crushing defeat in three Hindi-speaking states has put the India Alliance in a coma at the national level. Immediately after the election results came, voices of protest started being raised from the alliance’s constituent parties. For this reason, the proposed alliance meeting on Wednesday has also been postponed. Leaders of major parties of the alliance started shying away from attending this meeting and then the meeting was postponed. In such a situation, the question is beginning to arise whether this alliance has started disintegrating even before it is formed at the national level.( Nitish-Mamata’s )
The Congress party is not accustomed to alliances like the BJP. Even though he ran the UPA government for 10 years, he does not have any special knowledge about the coalition’s religion. Madhya Pradesh elections are the latest example of this. In this state the party had clearly refused to follow the coalition dharma. Under pressure from the local leadership of the party i.e. senior leaders Kamal Nath and Digvijay Singh, he did not even allow the alliance meeting to be held in Bhopal. Not only this, during the election campaign, senior Congress leader Kamal Nath used abusive language about the chief of Samajwadi Party, one of the largest constituents of the alliance. In such a situation, it seems that the word arrogance that Prime Minister Narendra Modi uses for this alliance is correct to a great extent.
Congress is not under Rahul’s control!
As far as the future of India Alliance is concerned, it can be said that the atmosphere is beginning to deteriorate. The alliance partners are criticizing Congress. From Nitish Kumar to Mamata Banerjee are said to be angry. Four-five months are left for the Lok Sabha elections and now it has to be seen how active the Congress party will be in the coming times. Regarding the role of Rahul Gandhi, Sahay says that Rahul Gandhi’s image has definitely improved. Despite the latest election results, his image has improved, but it still seems that his party is not under his control. This seems to be the case from the way local leaders contested elections in Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh. In Rajasthan, the entire party leadership had to bow before Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot. His favorite candidate had to be given the ticket unwillingly. At the same time, in Madhya Pradesh, Kamal Nath contested the elections on his own terms, apart from the central line.