Watch | Kanhaiya Kumar Joins Congress: Is This the ‘Left Turn’ of the Grand Old Party?

The Wire’s Arfa Khanum Sherwani discusses the latest developments in the Congress party with political scientist Apoorvanand.  

Kanhaiya Kumar, who cut his teeth in politics through student activism and ran as a CPI nominee from Bihar in the last general elections, has joined the Congress party. Independent MLA from Gujarat Jignesh Mevani – although he did not take Congress membership officially – has offered his support.

Both Kumar and Mevani are known for their belief in Left politics and have emerged as staunch and independent critics of the BJP and Narendra Modi.

With both of them now in the Congress fold, questions are being asked as to whether the grand old party has now taken a leftward turn. The Wire‘s Arfa Khanum Sherwani discusses these questions with political scientist Apoorvanand.

A Better Fighting Chance? How JNU Students Are Viewing Kanhaiya Kumar’s Shift to Congress

While some feel that Congress will give the firebrand leader a better chance to fight BJP, others at his former university feel the decision is at odds with his leftist background.

Note: This article was first published on September 29, 2021 and was republished on September 30, 2021.

New Delhi: Kanhaiya Kumar’s entry into Congress has spurred active debate on the campus of the Jawaharlal Nehru University, where left-wing political organisations often dominate the union. 

While some feel that it was a wise decision as only the Congress can defeat the Bharatiya Janata Party, some others are disappointed.

The former Jawaharlal Nehru University Students’ Union president had made headlines as a firebrand student leader after the 2016 sedition row. In 2018, he had joined the Communist Party of India. After over three years in CPI, he officially joined the Congress yesterday, September 28. Independent Vadgam MLA and Dalit rights activist Jignesh Mevani, who also has a past in leftist politics, also announced support to Congress at the same event.

Current JNUSU vice-president Saket Moon says that Kumar joining the Congress will result in dilution of the ideology he believes in. Moon had campaigned for Kumar during the 2019 general elections when he was contesting from the Begusarai seat in Bihar. 

Even though he lost to Giriraj Singh of the BJP, he came second, securing close to 22% of the vote share.

“His entry into Congress is disappointing. I went to Bihar and campaigned for him in 2019, even though I was not in CPI because he represented a possibility of a stronger left,” Moon said, while speaking to The Wire.

Moon is a member of the Democratic Students’ Federation (DSF), which is part of the ‘united left’ in the university since 2018. This a group which includes the All India Students’ Federation (AISF), where Kumar kick-started his political journey as a student in the Patna College of Commerce.

Also read: With Jignesh Mevani and Kanhaiya Kumar, Rahul Gandhi Asserts His Vision For Congress

Kumar is not the first JNUSU president to go and join the Congress, Moon says. “Several former JNU presidents have joined the Congress before and have been co-opted to maintain the status quo. Joining Congress may look like a short cut, but his own ideology will get diluted,” Moon adds.

He added that the Congress has not been able to provide a secular opposition to the BJP. 

In a statement, the DSF also said that Kumar’s entry into the Congress comes as an “anti-climax.” 

CPI leader Kanhaiya Kumar addresses a rally against CAA and NRC, in Muzaffarpur, Saturday, February 1, 2020. Photo: PTI

DSF secretary Sarika Chaudhary and president Swati Singh further say in the statement that the Congress’s purported inability to lead an effective opposition against the Modi-led BJP government at the Centre is contributing to the rise of the Rashtriya Swayansevak Sangh and BJP. 

“In contrast, the Left movement in JNU represents the urge for progressive and radical social transformation in India to liberate the masses from majoritarian subjugation of Brahmanical Hindutva, caste and gender oppression and economic exploitation,” the statement says.

‘Left movement not dependent on any one face’

National president of the All India Students’ Association (AISA) and former JNUSU president from 2018-2019, N. Sai Balaji says that the left movement will not be weakened as it is not dependent on any one face. 

“We have seen how the left emerged as a powerful force in the previous Bihar assembly elections. They used common people’s issues and made them into election issues,” Balaji says to The Wire

Also read: How a Reinvented Left Is Gaining Electoral Significance in Poll-Bound Bihar

The media portrays the left as only limited to one or two faces, which is not true. The left has risen in spite of so many challenges, and any one individual cannot weaken it,” the PhD student adds.

Stepping stone

But members of the AISF, which follows the ideology of the CPI, of which Kumar was a member for over three years, say they are not surprised. 

Santosh Kumar, convenor in the AISF’s JNU wing says, “If he thinks that joining a mainstream party after having been actively involved in student politics will be good for his political career, it is his decision and he must follow it.” 

He added that for many young leaders, campus activism is a stepping stone for mainstream politics. 

The left has been skeptical of Congress and Kumar, too, has on several occasions criticised the National Students’ Union of India, the youth wing of the Congress, says Prashant Kumar, president of the NSUI’s JNU wing.

“But fundamentally, we believe in the same values and principles,” he says, adding Kumar will play an important role in resisting the BJP’s attack on democracy, constitutional values and secularism.

Kanhaiya Kumar, Umar Khalid and Anirban Bhattacharya in JNU. Photo: PTI/Files

‘Left understandably disappointed’

“Since 2016, he has been at the forefront of the struggle against BJP, and Congress will give him a better fighting chance. Even if all left organisations unite, they will not be able to defeat the BJP. Only the Congress can do that,” the NSUI leader says.

In the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad camp, the sentiment is the opposite. Members of the organisation, affiliated to the RSS, feel that by inducting Kumar, Congress has “proven” that it is “anti-national.”

Aditya Nigam, an academic from the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, is among those who have followed Kumar’s journey in politics from close quarters. 

He says, “The left is understandably disappointed because they had made a hero out of him. But saying that his ideologies have changed is incorrect as he has joined a party that is currently out of power to put up a fight against the BJP in the days to come. It will not be comfortable for him.”

Nigam says that in spite of all the issues in the Congress, it is the only party that still has a chance against the BJP. 

He adds that by giving former Congress chief Rahul Gandhi a photo of Mahatma Gandhi, B.R. Ambedkar and Bhagat Singh, Kumar has kept his political ideology “more or less intact.” 

While Kumar is expected to be a key campaigner for Congress in the 2024 Lok Sabha polls, that JNU students and student leaders will be among keen watchers of Kumar’s political presence goes without saying.

With Jignesh Mevani and Kanhaiya Kumar, Rahul Gandhi Asserts His Vision For Congress

The two firebrand politicians, who have significant pasts as Leftist leaders, appear to be significant inductions as Rahul Gandhi steers Congress away from an old guard keen on using ‘soft Hindutva’ to counter the BJP.

New Delhi: Jignesh Mevani and Kanhaiya Kumar, both of whom shot into the limelight with their fierce and unrelenting opposition to the Narendra Modi government over the past few years, joined the Congress party on Tuesday.

Mevani, currently an independent MLA from Gujarat’s Vadgam, had earlier announced that both he and Kanhaiya Kumar would join the Congress. On his part, Kumar, earlier a national executive council member of the Communist Party of India (CPI), had remained tight-lipped, even as his party comrades rebuffed the speculation over his imminent departure. 

On Tuesday afternoon, all doubts cleared. Kanhaiya was officially inducted into the Congress by former party president Rahul Gandhi. Mevani only announced his “affiliation” with Congress, as formally joining would have meant that he would have had to resign from his MLA’s position to which he was elected as an independent candidate. 

As Congress secures two high-profile leaders, it becomes clear that Mevani and Kumar are to be among the top faces for the party in the 2024 parliamentary polls. Informed sources in the Congress told The Wire that Rahul Gandhi, who still holds the reins to party functioning, was particularly keen on them joining Congress as part of his plan to pass the mantle to fresh and bold voices.

Beating the stereotypical pattern of formal induction events, Mevani and Kumar turned the occasion into a stage for launching a scathing criticism of the Sangh parivar while announcing their political plans for the future. Both said that they have joined the Congress with “a sense of urgency to save the idea of India” and “protect the constitution”, which they said were under an unprecedented attack by the BJP-led regime.  

“I am joining the Congress because it’s not just a party, it’s an idea. It’s the country’s oldest and most democratic party, and I am emphasising ‘democratic’…Not just me, but many think the country can’t survive without Congress,” Kumar said at the press briefing, adding that the Congress is like a “big ship”.

“If it’s saved, I believe many people’s aspirations, Mahatma Gandhi’s oneness, Bhagat Singh’s courage, and B.R. Ambedkar’s idea of equality will be protected, too. This is why I have joined it,” he said. 

Similarly, Mevani said, “To save democracy and the idea of India, I have to be with a party that led the Independence struggle and dragged the British out of the country. This is why I am here with the Congress today.”

Rajya Sabha MP KC Venugopal felicitates newly joined Congress member Kanhaiya Kumar, at AICC in New Delhi, Tuesday, Sep. 28, 2021. MLA Jignesh Mewani is also seen. Photo: PTI

Kumar said that while he has learnt everything from his parent party, the CPI, and owed a lot to it, he believed that the Congress, which is in direct competition with the BJP in more than 200 out of 545 parliamentary seats, is better placed to “save India” from the Sangh Parivar, which, according to him, is on a mission to fundamentally transform the country’s ideological and constitutional tenets for the worse. 

On why he chose the Congress over the CPI, he said that the current political struggle against the BJP could only be fought and led by overcoming “ideological narrowness” and that any political force should sense an urgency to immediately accelerate its course of action.

Kumar and Mevani switching over to the Congress assumes significance for other reasons too. 

First, in the past, the communists have seen young, dynamic leaders choosing the Congress or other parties and forums in the long run. Some of the most prominent names among such leaders include the Nationalist Congress Party’s D.P. Tripathi, Congress leader from Rajasthan Batti Lal Bairwa, Congress’s Rajya Sabha MP from Karnataka Syed Naseer Hussain, Congress national secretary Shakeel Ahmed Khan, Prasenjit Bose who has founded his own forum in Kolkata, and more recently former JNUSU presidents Sandeep Singh and Mohit Pandey.

Kumar’s defection to the Congress suggests that the trend started by the prominent communist leader and former Lok Sabha MP Mohan Kumaramangalam, who switched over from the CPI to the Congress in 1967, has not ended.

Many who quit the Left parties could not adjust to their rigid structures, which are largely governed by the principle of “democratic centralism”. The centralised structure worked in the party’s favour at a time when communist parties also led multiple movements concerning socio-economic issues of the working classes.

However, with the presence of these parties diminishing in most parts of India over time, young activists saw the party’s rigidity as an impediment. Many who switched over to other parties after learning the ropes of politics as Leftists said the slow-decision making in their parent parties was stifling the energy of youth activists.        

Kumar came to national prominence after a rousing speech in 2016 as the Jawaharlal Nehru University Students’ Union president. In what was a highly tense environment after he, along with two other JNU students Umar Khalid and Anirban Bhattacharya, were arrested in a sedition case, Kumar spoke after he was released on bail. His televised speech touched upon multiple concerns that resonated with a large section of Indian youth and was considered by many as one of the most articulate criticisms of the BJP.

Kanhaiya Kumar, Umar Khalid and Anirban Bhattacharya in JNU. Photo: PTI/Files

He went on to campaign against the BJP in many states and platforms, contested the 2019 Lok Sabha elections in Bihar on a CPI ticket, and gradually emerged as one of the most prominent independent critics of the Modi government and the Sangh Parivar.

Also read: The BJP Has Its Own Toolkit to Go After Dissidents Which It Uses Ruthlessly

Unlike Kumar, Mevani did not belong to a Left party but doesn’t hesitate to admit his Marxist beliefs. Having worked with eminent human rights lawyer Mukul Sinha in Ahmedabad, Mevani, also a lawyer, took up cases of the most marginalised in Gujarat, and gradually emerged as a notable Dalit activist. In many of his speeches, he takes up the socio-economic concerns of Dalits and minorities – issues which Left parties have historically raised – the most prominent among them being land reforms and labour rights.

He shot to prominence in July 2016 when he led a mass demonstration against the brutal beating of Dalit youths by ‘cow protection’ vigilantes in the presence of police. He had first joined the Aam Aadmi Party in 2014 but plunged into electoral politics when in 2017 he contested the Gujarat assembly polls from Vadgam as an independent candidate.

Mevani, along with Patidar leader Hardik Patel and Alpesh Thakore, who has now joined the BJP, became the faces of opposition in the run up to that election. Sensing his popularity, Rahul Gandhi decided to extend his party’s support to Mevani and helped him win. 

While the Left could not retain two of its most popular leaders, the Congress has shown unusual alacrity in joining forces with them. Over the last few years, Rahul Gandhi has placed multiple student leaders from diverse Leftist backgrounds in important positions. His own interventions over the last few years have been pointedly welfarist in nature. Even as many Congress leaders have resorted to what is now known as “soft Hindutva”, Gandhi has unhesitatingly advanced an ideological criticism of the Sangh parivar at every juncture, even while proclaiming his own Hinduness on several occasions.

Not only has he been the most unapologetic critic of the Modi government for its majoritarian politics, he has also taken up economic concerns of the poor. At the same time, he has pointedly attacked Modi government’s alleged cronyism which, according to the former Congress president, has favoured select corporate entities. 

In the past few days, Gandhi, who has also battled the charge of indecision, has taken bold decisions like appointing the first ever Dalit chief minister of Punjab, or supporting OBC chief minister Bhupesh Baghel over his rival T.S. Singh Deo in Chhattisgarh. The Congress in opposition has historically taken left-of-centre positions but many in the party believe that the party’s recent leftward turn is much more decisive and is being taken to mould the party fundamentally under the leadership of Gandhi. 

While a section in the party is somewhat discomfited by this, Gandhi’s interventions appear to be attracting many like Kumar and Mevani to the Congress.

Gujarat MLA Jignesh Mevani, Kanhaiya Kumar To Join Congress on September 28

The development comes ahead of next year’s assembly polls in BJP-ruled Gujarat. Gujarat Congress working president Hardik Patel said all youth willing to work to ‘strengthen Gandhi and Nehru’s ideals’ are welcome in the party.

Ahmedabad: Jignesh Mevani, an independent Gujarat MLA and influential Dalit leader, announced on Saturday that he would join Congress on September 28 along with former JNU student leader Kanhaiya Kumar.

The development comes ahead of the next year’s assembly elections in the BJP-ruled Gujarat. Mevani had won election from the Vadgam assembly constituency in Banaskantha district in 2017 with the backing of Congress. “On September 28, I will be joining the Indian National Congress along with Kanhaiya Kumar,” he told PTI, adding that he will be able to talk in detail about the decision only after that.

Working president of Gujarat Congress Hardik Patel will also attend the function in Delhi where he will be inducted in the party in the presence of Rahul Gandhi, Mevani said.

“We welcome all the revolutionary youths who are willing to work for the development of the country and strengthen the Congress party and the ideals of (Mahatma) Gandhi, Sardar (Patel) and (Jawaharlal) Nehru,” Hardik Patel said in a statement.

He described Mevani as “an old friend” and said his entry will help the party both in the state and at the national level.

Chief spokesperson of Gujarat Congress Manish Doshi said Mevani became an MLA with the support of Congress workers in the 2017 elections, and his entry “will strengthen the party’s fight against the corrupt policies of the BJP”. “Congress party welcomes everyone who fights against the corrupt policies of the BJP. The party policy is to ensure justice to everyone in Gujarat and fight against every such policy of the BJP which is anti-people, anti-youth, anti-farmer, anti-poor,” Doshi said.