Congress Says No Scope for Consensus on BJP’s President Nominee

The Congress has spurned the BJP’s appeal for consensus on its choice for president and said the opposition will take a call on contesting the poll after a meeting on June 22.

Congress president, Sonia Gandhi. Credit: PTI/File Photo

The Congress has spurned the BJP’s appeal for consensus on its choice for president and said the opposition will take a call on contesting the poll after a meeting on June 22.

Congress president, Sonia Gandhi. Credit: PTI/File Photo

Congress president, Sonia Gandhi. Credit: PTI/File Photo

New Delhi: The Congress today spurned the BJP’s appeal for consensus on its choice for president and said the opposition would take a call on contesting the election after a meeting on June 22.

The BJP had taken a “unilateral decision”, Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad said soon after the announcement of Bihar Governor Ram Nath Kovind as the NDA’s candidate for president.

“Congress does not want to comment on this issue as we want to take a unanimous decision with all other opposition parties on the presidential elections. The final call will be taken in a meeting of all opposition parties on June 22,” Azad told reporters.

Terming the BJP’s efforts to reach out to the opposition through its senior leaders as a “formality and a PR exercise”, Azad said the ruling party should have built consensus before announcing the candidate.

“But they informed us after announcing this decision so there is no scope for consensus now… we were not expecting this from the ruling party. But it is their will, they are free to take a one-sided unilateral decision,” Azad added.

No names were discussed when senior BJP leaders M Venkaiah Naidu and Rajnath Singh met Congress president Sonia Gandhi last week, the Congress leader said.

Asked to comment on the BJP fielding a Dalit candidate for the top constitutional post, Azad said, “…I don’t want to comment on this…I don’t want to comment on the merits and demerits of the candidate.”

He added that minorities, backwards and Dalits were not priorities for the BJP-led government. Atrocities on Dalits in Saharanpur were a clear example of this.

Discussing whether Nitish Kumar would attend the June 22 meeting, Azad said he had himself called the Bihar chief minister who had assured him that there would be somebody from his Janata Dal-United.