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A day after, conspiracy of silence brews in BJP
Rahul Shrivastav, Sunday June 14, 2009, New Delhi

"I have sent my resignation. I am happy it has been accepted and have no further comments," said Yashwant Sinha a day after his letter bomb triggered waves in the BJP.

The BJP's latest rebel may be holding his peace for now. But party president Rajnath Singh's  gag order isn't bringing peace even as the BJP's national executive meets next weekend.

The clamour for action is rising. Many of the BJP's Uttarakhand MLAs are in Delhi, demanding Chief Minister B C Khanduri's removal. They hold him responsible for losing all five Parliament seats.

But the party is denying any trouble.

Says BJP state president B S Rawat: "These are rumors, there are no reasons for any kind of dissent."

Uttarakhand is a tiny state but a big example of how the BJP seems to have adopted a conspiracy of silence.

The chief minister sent his resignation right after the defeat. But the party president did nothing. For holding a BJP leader responsible in one state would have forced him and other top leaders to accept blame for the BJP's defeat.

So by that logic:

  • Rajnath didn't act against rebels, Jaswant, Yashwant, Kulkarni
  • Hasn't accept resignations from Rajasthan and Haryana  unit chiefs

Those who benefitted by being appointed to posts after the loss say the worst is over.

Says Sushma Swaraj, the BJP deputy leader in the Lok Sabha: "Instead of speaking to media, people should speak in an appropriate platform. I think this matter has ended and there is nothing to speak of."

Now the party waits for the national executive on the 20th and the 21st where a clash for control of the party is expected even as ordinary workers continue to wait for a roadmap for the future.

 
 
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Tags: BJP in crisis, Yashwant Sinha
Comments
Posted by rakesh sharma on Jun 15, 2009
Yashwant's resignation and Jaswants note are begining of disaster of BJP. Now the leaders are to look for joining some other party for their careers.
Posted by Ganesh on Jun 15, 2009
Yashwant Sinha's statements indicates he is on the way out from BJP. While Jaswant Singh's comments were constructive and nudging the party towards introspection, Yashwant Sinha was sarcastic and resentful. Jaswant Singh also quoted Sushma Swaraj as his party colleague and said he know his limitations. This indicates he is reconciled to the next generation taking over and is primarily striving to retain his position as an elder statesman. Yashwant Sinha's statements need to be seen in the light of Bihar elections next year. He could be useful to the Congress in its attempts to revive the party in the state as a showcase acquisition of a leader who resented BJP's 'communal' politics and joined the 'secular' bandwagon.
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