Amid demands for drastic overhaul of Congress, Satyavrat Chaturvedi, a member of the Rajy Sabha, said what the party needed was a "cardiac surgery" and "cosmetic surgery" will not do.
In a pot shot at Digvijay Singh who had favoured a major surgery in the organisation, Chaturvedi said "those who are talking of surgery needed to introspect as because of them the party has come to such a pass."
"Cardiac surgery is necessary. The party will have to think about those people under whose leadership the party had to face such a defeat," Chaturvedi said apparently training his guns on the leaders in the states where the party lost.
At the AICC briefing, party spokesman Abhishek Singhvi was subjected to a lot of questions on the issue of organizational overhaul and statements by several leaders, including him, on the exercise.
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He dismissed the contention that suggestion for a reform or improvement in the party were against the interests of the organisation.
The statement of the Congress spokesperson was significant given the fact that only two days back another party spokesperson P C Chako has said that Singh should have made sugestions in party fora.
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Singhvi saw nothing wrong in what Singh had pitched for or what he himself has suggested. He said Chaturvedi's statements are also in order, except one sentence where he has made some attack on another individual.
New younger state leaders should be brought in, Congress Working Committee revamped and "usual faces" "shunted" to advisory roles were among the suggestions made by Singhvi yesterday while maintaining that the talk of "surgery" in the organisation is "never about unifocal look at leadership".
Among the steps being suggested by leaders was a "new" Congress Working Committee, the apex decision-making body of the party, new general secretaries and early declaration of candidates.
Echoing Singhvi's views on revamping major bodies, former Union Minister V Kishore Chandra Deo too had advocated the need for sending over a dozen senior leaders, whom he accused of "misleading" party chief Sonia Gandhi, on a compulsory holiday.