It’s poll season in Chhattisgarh and Chief Minister Bhupesh Baghel is out to win friends and influence people. So when the Congress central leadership elevated his bête noire, health minister T.S. Singh Deo, as the deputy chief minister, Baghel welcomed the move. The Congress high command had on June 28 convened a meeting in New Delhi to which 16 top leaders from Chhattisgarh, including Baghel, Singh Deo and Pradesh Congress Committee president Mohan Markam, were invited. The stated purpose of the meeting was to strategise for the assembly election in November as also to thrash out any lingering issues among those attending the meeting. The ongoing war between Baghel and Singh Deo and Markam was one such issue. Singh Deo aired his grievances, mainly about being weakened in north Chhattisgarh where he had worked with then state party chief Baghel for a victory in 2018. Singh Deo had complained in the past too, but the party had not taken note. This time, the top Congress leadership not only gave him an ear but also rewarded him. Party president Mallikarjun Kharge announced Singh Deo’s elevation as deputy CM—apparently in a bid to resolve differences between him and Baghel. The idea was to prevent the BJP from profiting from the rift. However, a decision on Markam, whose organisational reshuffle ruffled many feathers, is still awaited.
Baghel as state Congress chief in 2018 had led the party to its most comprehensive electoral victory in Chhattisgarh, winning 68 of the 90 seats. In four months, he faces another referendum on his work. While the BJP claims that corruption is at an all-time high, investors are shunning Chhattisgarh and the state has regressed since 2018, Baghel’s plan for victory focuses on the farm sector, with a bit of soft Hindutva, cow politics and some deft caste and community manoeuvring thrown in. Will his efforts pay off?
This story is from the July 17, 2023 edition of India Today.
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This story is from the July 17, 2023 edition of India Today.
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