Congress high command tonight indicated that Maharashtra Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan is unlikely to be changed.
"The Chief Minister met Congress President. I do not think there will be any change," a senior leader said after Chavan met Sonia Gandhi.
The leader, who requested anonymity, was asked whether Chavan is being replaced amid growing dissensions in the state unit following the party's debacle in the Lok Sabha polls.
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Soon after the results, Chavan had accepted full responsibility for the defeat. Today's meeting took place in the backdrop of Congress leadership grappling with the issue of possible in party-ruled states where it performed poorly in the polls.
A senior party leader had last week said that with assembly polls in Maharashtra due within six months, the party will have to think about corrective measures at the earliest.
Former Maharashtra Chief Minister Ashok Chavan, who managed to win one of the two seats which Congress retained in the state, has already trained his guns on Chavan.
"In areas where the leadership was strong, the Narendra Modi wave did not have an impact," he had said in an apparent dig at the chief minister.
"The party needs to do a thorough analysis to look into what went wrong and take corrective measures," Ashok Chavan had said.
His criticism came at a time when many within Maharashtra Congress are demanding a leadership change ahead of Assembly polls. Several senior ministers are reportedly vying for the chief minister's chair.
Last week, Maharashtra Industries Minister Narayan Rane and EGS Minister Nitin Raut had sent in their resignations in a move which is being seen as attempt to force Chavan's exit. Both resignations were rejected.
Three days ago, Bhupinder Singh Hooda, Virbhadra Singh and Tarun Gogoi had met Gandhi after the poor performance of the party in their respective states Haryana, Himachal Pradesh and Assam.