Top Stories

Congress and India start talking about seat sharing. components of a bloc

Congress and India start talking about seat sharing. components of a bloc


Congress and India start talking about seat sharing. components of a bloc
Congress and India start talking about seat sharing. components of a bloc



According to Kharge, the opposition alliance's members will choose which party would fight each seat and how many seats it will contest. The Congress is now working on all 545 Lok Sabha seats and has assigned observers for each one. After the debate, this will be completed shortly.


According to sources, the party has made the decision to finish this month's seat-sharing agreement with other opposition parties.

Following lengthy internal deliberations, the Congress has started negotiations with like-minded India Bloc parties for seat sharing in a few states ahead of the Lok Sabha elections. According to sources, conversations have started with some parties and top party leaders have been instructed to get in touch with other coalition leaders.


According to sources, serious negotiations on seat sharing with the Aam Aadmi Party in Delhi and Punjab will begin on Monday. The five-member Congress committee on seat-sharing, which includes convenor Mukul Wasnik, senior leaders Ashok Gehlot and Bhupesh Baghel, has already conferred internally with state Congress presidents and has sent its conclusions to Mallikarjun Kharge, the head of the party. Following the decision by the 28-party opposition coalition to join together and challenge the BJP in the next Lok Sabha elections, seat-sharing negotiations with other parties began.


In an effort to unseat the BJP in 2024, the India Bloc has decided to run a single opposition candidate for a seat in the Lok Sabha. According to sources, Congress President Kharge has given top leaders—including committee members who share seats—the task of coordinating seat allocation with other political parties. The Congress has formed pre-election coalitions with the JMM in Jharkhand, the DMK in Tamil Nadu, the RJD and JDU in Bihar, and other parties in Assam. However, it does not have an alliance with some of the major parties in several important states.


The most contentious of them are Kerala, West Bengal, Delhi, and Punjab, where party officials have recognized that it is difficult to arrange seat-sharing with supporters of the India Bloc. The most contentious of them are Kerala, West Bengal, Delhi, and Punjab, where party officials have recognized that it is difficult to arrange seat-sharing with supporters of the India Bloc. They do not want to compromise with one another, and Congress would have to pick between them even though they are members of the TMC and Left opposition coalition in West Bengal.


Recent remarks made by Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury, the chairman of the Congress PCC, and TMC officials do not augur well for a potential alliance between the two parties in the state. With 19 of Kerala's 20 MPs belonging to the Congress, a deal with the CPI-M seems unsatisfactory since it would force the party to support its current members. Both the AAP and the Congress state units in Punjab are certain of their victories and are unwilling to make any concessions. According to sources, state Congress organizations have resisted seat-sharing in other states as well, such as Kerala.


Given the recent remarks made by Kamal Nath and Akhilesh Yadav, who is upset with the party for denying him a seat in the most recent Madhya Pradesh Assembly elections, it seems that things are not going well between the Congress and Samajwadi Party in Uttar Pradesh. against the man. To strengthen the opposition against the BJP, the party is now negotiating seat sharing with all of its partners.


According to sources, the party has made the decision to finish this month's seat-sharing agreement with other opposition parties. Congress President Kharge said on Saturday that the opposition faction's post allotment will be decided by Indian party leaders in ten to fifteen days. This statement was made in response to rumors that the alliance could choose a convenor ahead of the Lok Sabha elections. He said that all other issues, including the India Bloc's seat-sharing, will be settled quickly. According to party insiders, this month's end is probably when a resolution would be achieved.


According to Kharge, the opposition alliance's members will choose which party would fight each seat and how many seats it will contest. The Congress is now working on all 545 Lok Sabha seats and has assigned observers for each one. After the debate, this will be completed shortly. He said, "We have already finalized legislative bodies observers for all the constituencies...," when asked how many seats the party will fight. We want to visit every parliamentary seat and conduct an evaluation." In the end, the precise figures will be revealed after there is an India alliance and discussions take place in every state. However, we are making an attempt everywhere," he said.



No comments: