Congress workers don't favour non-Gandhi chief: Vasan

His remark comes in the wake of former Union Minister P. Chidambaram's observation last week that a non-Gandhi leader can head the party "some day."

October 27, 2014 04:36 pm | Updated November 28, 2021 07:38 am IST - Chennai

Senior Congress leader G K Vasan on Monday joined issue with party colleague P. Chidambaram on the leadership of the Congress, saying  “no Congress worker or leader from Kashmir to Kanyakumari wants a person from non-Gandhi clan to be the Congress president." File photo: B. Velankanni Raj

Senior Congress leader G K Vasan on Monday joined issue with party colleague P. Chidambaram on the leadership of the Congress, saying “no Congress worker or leader from Kashmir to Kanyakumari wants a person from non-Gandhi clan to be the Congress president." File photo: B. Velankanni Raj

Endorsing the leadership of Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi, former Union Shipping Minister and senior Congress leader G K Vasan said in Chennai on Monday that party workers were not in favour of a non-Gandhi party chief.

Last week, when asked if a non-Gandhi leader can become Congress president, >former Union Finance Minister and senior party leader P Chidambaram told a television channel “I think so. Someday yes.” He, however, said, “I do not know” when asked about a timeline for such a development to happen.

Against this background, Vasan told reporters in Chennai that “no Congress worker or leader from Kashmir to Kanyakumari wants a person from non-Gandhi clan to be the Congress president. There is no such idea. This is my opinion.”

The opinion of Vasan, endorsing the leadership of Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi and reiterating his loyalty to them, assumes significance as he wields considerable clout in the faction-ridden Tamil Nadu Congress Committee.

The >remarks of Chidambaram and Vasan’s counter to it has come at a time when the process of organisational elections was on in the Congress , which will culminate with the election of the new party chief by the end of July 2015.

The Congress party, under Sonia Gandhi’s leadership since March 1998, has seen many ups and downs nationally with two consecutive victories in the 2004 and 2009 Lok Sabha polls.

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