Mid-rung leaders from factions loyal to the two leaders continued their slanging match today blaming each side for being responsible for the sudden flare-up in factionalism after the party-led government came to power in 2011.
Sources close to Chennithala said his supporters, known in party circles as "I" group, would meet in Kochi later today to work out strategies and take up their case with the central leadership.
They feel Chandy 'humiliated' Chennithala by denying him a suitable portfolio after wooing him to join the ministry.
Senior leader and KPCC spokesperson M M Hassan, seen as a Chandy camper, told reporters that party issues had not yet become complex as projected by the media.
More From This Section
"It is wrong to say Congress in the state has split in the middle along group lines. There is no issue which cannot be settled through talks," he said.
Groupism, a bane of the Congress in Kerala for decades, resurfaced recently after Chennithala's possibility of joining the UDF Ministry dimmed.
What added a serious dimension to the rumblings in the last few days was a newspaper interview in which Chennithala purportedly said it would be difficult for him to maintain the same smooth equation with Chandy since he felt he had been insulted over the ministerial issue.
Chennithala, however, had said he had not given any such interview though he did not altogether refuted its contents.
Significantly, Chennithala has been keeping silent since yesterday despite wrangling in the state unit dominating media debates for the last few days.