Jagan juggernaut in Delhi, challenges Congress in Andhra (Roundup)

By IANS
Tuesday, January 11, 2011

NEW DELHI - Taking his fight against the Congress to the heart of the national capital, former MP Y.S. Jaganmohan Reddy Tuesday put up a massive show of strength with 31 Andhra Pradesh legislators and two party MPs and declared that he was doing it a favour by not bringing down the state government.

Adding to the woes of the ruling Congress, which is already facing the heat on the issue of separate statehood to Telangana, the young leader, 38, arrived in New Delhi in a special train with 3,000 supporters and went straight to Jantar Mantar, the 186-year-old observatory in central Delhi that became the centrestage of his protest.

Accompanied by two MPs, Mekapati Rajamohan Reddy from Nellore and Sabbam Hari from Anakapalli, legislators, former ministers, other leaders and thousands of supporters, Jagan, as he is popularly known, began a daylong fast here to highlight the “injustice” to Andhra Pradesh in the Krishna Water Disputes Tribunal Award and the plight of farmers.

Amongst the legislators were 24 MLAs from the Congress and four from the Telugu Desam Party (TDP) and the Praja Rajyam Party (PRP), his associates said. Three members of legislative council belonging to Congress party are also supporting Jagan at the fast.

“Currently I am doing a favour to the Congress party. If my MLAs resign, the government there will fall. In fact I am a gentleman so I am doing a favour to the Congress party by not asking my people to resign. If I wanted to seriously do it I would have done it long back,” a confident Jagan, who plans to formally launch his political party in the coming days, told the media.

“My people are also saying in 2014 they will be contesting on my party ticket and not on Congress party ticket. They are openly saying that they are doing a favour to the Congress party by continuing in the party.”

The numbers game could prove him right — the Congress has 156 members in the 294-member state assembly. It requires 149 members for a simple majority.

Faced with the challenge from the son of its charismatic chief minister, the late Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy, the Congress hit back saying that its government was not under threat.

“The Congress government was never in any kind of a threat, is not in any threat and neither will be,” said party spokesperson Manish Tewari.

Was the confidence misplaced?

Congress legislator and actress Jayasudha, for instance, was categorical that she respected the party and its president Sonia Gandhi but would follow Jagan.

“I am a film actress and I was invited by the late YSR to join politics… Naturally, I will also follow Jaganmohan Reddy,” she told a TV channel.

A senior Congress leader admitted that Jagan’s protest in the capital was a challenge to the party. “The party has to tread carefully as it has a thin majority in the state assembly,” the leader told IANS on the condition of anonymity.

A large stretch of Parliament Street was blocked off by Jagan’s supporters, with a dais built in the middle of the road for the fasting leaders.

Jagan’s associates said the protest was to highlight the “injustice” done to Andhra Pradesh in the Krishna waters tribunal award as also the plight of the state’s farmers who had suffered heavily due to cyclones and heavy rains in the past months.

Jagan resigned from the Congress and his Kadapa parliamentary seat after accusing the party leadership of trying to divide the family by luring his uncle Y.S. Vivekananda Reddy with a ministerial berth in the Andhra Pradesh cabinet.

Jagan has been on a collision course with the Congress since the leadership rejected his claim to the chief minister’s chair following the death of his father, the late chief minister Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy, in a helicopter crash Sep 2, 2009. He moved the Election Commission last week for registering his newly-floated political party.

Filed under: Politics

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