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Congress leader Shashi Tharoor at the NDTV townhall in Mumbai spoke on a wide range of issues linked to the party ahead of the party President’s election. One of the key points he made was an allusion to an ‘official’ non-official Congress candidate, Mallikarjun Kharge, who the Kerala MP considered a veteran leader with solid backing of his peers. Mr Tharoor said he is only a simple citizen who enjoys the support of the common people.
Highlights
- On Congress president elections: The Gandhi family has made it clear, also through Mr Mistry, that there’s no official candidate. I am assuming that there’s no official candidate. But some people in the party are assuming that there’s an official candidate.
- I have to take the word of my party president and Gandhi family.
- I always expected that there would be a senior candidate and senior leaders would rally behind him. And that’s apparent with Mallikarjun Kharge’s nomination form and his campaign trail. Wherever he goes, there are leaders. But wherever I am going, there are normal citizens.
- He (Rahul Gandhi) never asked me to withdraw. But had he asked me to, I had to say I am sorry. I have never run away from any challenge in my life.
- On the fairness of Congress elections: I am running because I don’t think we can have business as usual. We need a change not just inside the party but we need to demonstrate it to the public.
- What drove the public, some senior leaders away from us? – And change in the party is a way to demonstrate that.
- I can’t say that it’s a level playing field. There are some aspects that suggest an uneven playing field.
- On reforms needed in Congress: I believe we (Congress) need to get back voters who didn’t vote for us in 2014 and 2019.
- Our principle [as against Mallikarjun Kharge] is different as to how to make the party ready for the elections. I believe that business as usual wouldn’t work. So it’s between business as usual and parivartan (change).
- No such thing as G-23. I signed that letter which asked for a very specific thing. All those things in the letter are in my manifesto. Those who were supporting those points are not supporting this.
- I want to decentralise our high command structure. I want to empower our grassroots. It is about re-energising the party by empowering the workers.
- On the Elitist tag: I am not some sort of a rich man. I don’t come from a rich family. My father was a salaried man. It’s wrong to call me an elitist. Maybe am guilty of being rich in intellect.
- I won three Lok Sabha elections in a constituency with support of the fisherfolk and adivasis, so give me a break about this talk of being elitist.
- On Mallikarjun Kharge: He’s a Dalit. If he wanted to bring about some change, he would have done it.
- On the Gandhi family: The DNA of the Congress party and blood of the Nehru-Gandhi family has been inextricably intertwined.
- Rahul Gandhi can be a great asset. I have been with him during the ‘Bharat Jodo Yatra’. And I have seen scores of people from 6 in the morning to cheer for him.
- On taking on BJP: I find it bizarre that BJP has a plank of nationalism where nobody from their has contributed to the nation’s freedom struggle.
- On Hindutva: I am a bhakt of Vivekananda. His vision of Hinduism is something I have grown up with. It’s about acceptance. It’s – you accept my truth, I will accept yours.
- Hinduism has nothing to do with Hindutva.
- In a country of 80 per cent, BJP’s vote share is 30 per cent. We are standing up of broad-minded Hindus.
- On winning the vote of young people: I am not at all young enough to speak for them. So, I would hear their voices.
- I have suggested moving a constitutional amendment to have a certain number of seats for people under the age of 30.
- We have got to do much more on job creation and skill development.
- On winning or losing the Congress president elections: Doesn’t matter who wins. Whether Kharge wins or Tharoor wins, Congress party should win.
- If I were to lose, I would say that all the people who voted for me – are a voice that the party must heed.
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