The two Congress chief ministers of the states where the party has performed disastrously -- AK Antony in Kerala and Amarinder Singh in Punjab -- are contemplating resignation from their posts. |
In Kerala, the Congress lost the Vadakancherry Assembly seat contested by rebel leader K Karunakaran's son Muraleedharan. The Congress had never lost this seat before. |
Karunakaran's daughter, Padmaja Venugopal, also lost the Mukundapuram Lok Sabha seat last held by Karunakaran himself, and considered the safest Congress seat in Kerala. |
Apart from these two conspicuous defeats, the party generally fared badly, drawing a blank out of the 20 seats in the state, with 18 going to the Left Democratic Front, one going to the National Democratic Alliance, and one to the Muslim League. |
In Punjab, the situation is rather similar. Out of the 13 seats in the state, the Congress won just five, giving away eight held by it in the last parliament. |
Even Amarinder Singh's supporters are holding the lack of poll management responsible for the Congress' debacle. Punjab Deputy Chief Minister Rajinder Kaur Bhattal has publicly demanded his resignation. |
Bhattal has long been a candidate for chief ministership, and it took central intervention by the AICC to avert a split in the Punjab Congress after she had camped in New Delhi for several days to get Singh sacked. |
In Delhi, fresh from his electoral success, Akali Dal president Parkash Singh Badal cited Bhattal's statement to seek Amarinder's resignation. |
"If there is any political decency left with the chief minister, he should quit," he said, adding that "even his deputy has openly demanded his resignation". |