Priyanka’s Lok Sabha electoral bid from Wayanad supercharges UDF and miffs LDF and BJP
The Hindu
Priyanka Gandhi Vadra's move to contest in Wayanad sparks controversy and political maneuvering among Congress, CPI, and BJP.
Congress leader Priyanka Gandhi Vadra’s upcoming electoral bid to supplant her brother, Rahul Gandhi, as the party’s MP from the Wayanad Lok Sabha constituency has buoyed the Congress-led United Democratic Front (UDF) and nettled the Left Democratic Front (LDF) and Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
The Congress strategises that Ms. Vadra’s pivot to Kerala would invigorate the Opposition’s future electoral campaigns, potentially broadening its path to victory in the 2025 local body elections and beyond.
Congress’s gambit has also raised the discomfiting question of whether the party kept Wayanad voters in the dark about Mr. Gandhi’s second candidature from Rae Bareilly in Uttar Pradesh until after the Lok Sabha elections in Kerala were over, thus denying the electorate in Wayanad the democratic leeway to make an informed choice at the polling booth.
Notably, Communist Party of India (CPI) and BJP, two parties on opposing sides of the State’s political spectrum, waded into the political debate, accusing Congress of playing a trick on Wayanad voters by keeping Mr. Gandhi’s decision to contest from Rae Bareilly in Uttar Pradesh, a closely guarded secret until polling.
CPI’s LS candidate from Wayanad, Annie Raja, said Congress’s “intrigue-laced duplicity” about Mr. Gandhi’s auxiliary candidature reflected an utter disregard for voters.
Ms. Raja said Congress appeared guided by the mistaken belief that the LDF, not BJP, was its principal enemy in Kerala.
Ms. Raja criticised Congress leader K.C. Venugopal for allegedly insinuating that she owed her candidature from Wayanad to her husband and CPI national general secretary, D Raja. She said Mr. Venugopal’s position reeked of feudal patriarchy and scorn for the agency of women in public life.
More than 2.6 lakh village and ward volunteers in Andhra Pradesh, once celebrated as the government’s grassroots champions for their crucial role in implementing welfare schemes, are now in a dilemma after learning that their tenure has not been renewed after August 2023 even though they have been paid honoraria till June 2024. Disowned by both YSRCP, which was in power when they were appointed, and the current ruling TDP, which made a poll promise to double their pay, these former volunteers are ruing the day they signed up for the role which they don’t know if even still exists