Congress spokesperson Rajeev Gowda also accused the BJP of poaching its leaders with clean image ahead of Karnataka polls to provide a camouflage for their real antecedents. He, however, said people of the state will not be fooled and the BJP will meet a sorry outcome in the upcoming elections.
"If he had waited for little more time, he would have experienced that there is lot of internal effort that is going on for reorganising the party, revitalising the party.
Gowda said Karnataka and other states coming up for polls will deliver the same vote of confidence and "Krishna should have been a little more patient, he would have seen the impact of these changes and we could have used his advice and experience as well".
He said he has been following Krishna's political career and the Congress party had given him everything except three positions of President, Vice President and Prime Minister.
More From This Section
"In Karnataka, the BJP is desperately looking for fig leaf; who are their leaders? Their leaders are jailbirds and people who have a tremendously horrible reputation in front of the people of Karnataka - Shri Yeddyuruppa has been to jail, Shri Janardan Reddy has come out of jail and who else?
"The BJP before these elections has no face of its own. So they are reaching out to clean Congress people with the hope that it will provide them some kind of a camouflage for their real antecedents and their true track record. But people of Karnataka will not be fooled and the BJP will meet sorry outcome in the upcoming elections," he said.
To a question on the constitution of National Commission for Backward Classes, Gowda said "this has just come up and so we will discuss and study the details internally and then make a formal response".
"We need to understand the contours of what this constitutional body entails," he said.
On the issue of seeking any legal remedy in the matter of undermining the constitutional regulatory institutions, Gowda said the party will examine but essentially this is something that not just the party but many activist groups are taking up.