The induction decision, it turns out, was solely the party head’s. And that has sowed seeds of discomfort in its top brass.
Advani, 84, believes yesterday’s absorption of the foursome will be a loss of face for the party, adversely affecting its credibility in talking against corruption. The entire anti-graft movement the BJP launched in recent times will go waste if the party gave election tickets to tainted leaders, he fears, according to sources.
Advani, a three-time BJP president, is also upset because the central election committee meeting on Monday featured no discussion on allowing Kushwaha and Singh to join the party. Their induction happened the next day, when the BJP announced names of its 81 candidates from UP.
Clearly, Gadkari, 30 years younger to Advani, chose not to discuss the issue with senior party leaders. So, if BJP secretary Kirit Somaiya was caught off-guard after Kushwaha’s induction into the party, it was also because he had only last weekend met Central Bureau of Investigation director A P Singh, asking him to act against the former BSP minister. Somaiya had even submitted several documents to the probe agency’s chief as evidence against Kushwaha.
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To make matters worse for the BJP, CBI investigators raided 60 places across UP in pursuance of its inquiry into the NRHM scam when Kushwaha was the minister.
The latest development has not been a sole matter of difference between Gadkari and Advani. The BJP president has decided to give election ticket (Amritsar East) to the wife of cricketer-turned-politician Navjot Singh Sidhu, MP. This, when Advani is a staunch believer that the BJP must keep away from “dynasty politics” — one thing the principal opposition party keeps accusing the ruling Congress of.