Manipur
Jairam Ramesh (File image)

NEW DELHI: Senior Congress leader Jairam Ramesh was of the view that no opposition front to take on the BJP is possible without the Congress.

He also said if a coalition is formed for the 2024 general elections, the party will have a central role in it.

Ramesh, however, said it is too early to talk about all these right now as the Congress’ first priority is the upcoming elections in Karnataka and the string of state polls this year.

Ramesh’s remarks come after both Mamata Banerjee’s Trinamool Congress (TMC) and Uttar Pradesh’s Akhilesh Yadav-led Samajwadi Party (SP) saying that the two parties would stay away from both the Congress and the BJP, and indicating possible talks with other regional players ahead of the 2024 Lok Sabha elections.

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“If an opposition coalition is formed, the Congress will play a central role in it. No front is possible without the Congress. But it is too early to talk about this,” he reiterated.

First there is an election in Karnataka; after that, there are elections in Telangana, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Rajasthan and Mizoram, he noted.

“This year, we will be completely busy with state elections, we will see about 2024 elections later,” the former union minister said.

“Right now, meetings will continue, positioning will continue – ‘I will form a third front, I will form a fourth front, I will form a fifth front’ – all this will continue,” he added.

Ramesh asserted that a strengthened Congress is necessary for any opposition alliance, but the party’s priority at the moment is the Karnataka elections, followed by the elections in other states.

“Our (party) president Mallikarjun Kharge and senior leaders will work on whatever strategy has to be prepared and carry out talks with parties regarding the 2024 elections,” he said.

Asked whether the TMC staying away from protests by the opposition on the Adani issue and the NCP not coming all out in support has dented the opposition unity, he said, “No, I do not think so. The TMC may have its own logic, I do not want to say anything more than that.”

He said that 16 political parties are united on the demand for a joint parliamentary committee (JPC) probe into the Adani issue.

“The Nationalist Congress Party did not sign the letter to the director of the enforcement directorate, but they were with us in spirit if not in body,” he said.

“There are 16 parties and, let me say one thing very categorically, that the Supreme Court committee is no substitute for a JPC. The terms of reference of the Supreme Court committee are limited in scope; it is only a JPC that can unravel the full dimensions of this politico-economic scam,” he said on the Adani issue.

“Whatever Adani has done in India and abroad, he has done with the full blessings, support and patronage of the prime minister. The Supreme Court-monitored inquiry is not going into any of these issues,” he said.

“So far, the Congress party has raised 93 questions, and soon we will be reaching 100,” Ramesh noted, talking about the party’s ‘Hum Adani ke Hain Kaun’ series, under which it has been asking questions to Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the Adani issue.

“We have raised 93 questions so far. Those types of questions which are highly minute, pointed, granular, specific, they go beyond the terms of reference of a Supreme court-monitored inquiry. So this JPC is absolutely essential. The Supreme Court inquiry is no substitute, it is only an attempt at legitimisation and exoneration,” Ramesh alleged.

Asked if attempts of a third front would undermine the fight against the BJP, Ramesh said that, “right now the Congress is focused that its demand for JPC is met.”

“Right now, efforts are on to ensure that our voices get heard and this false propaganda and canards that are being spread, this intimidation, this harassment that is being attempted against Gandhi particularly, we are able to counter. All other issues can wait,” he said.

Asked whether the Adani issue would resonate with the people on the ground, Ramesh said, “We have to do what we have to do.” Inputs from agencies.