English हिन्दी
Connect with us

Latest Politics News

Cabinet reshuffle likely on Sunday with eye on Mission 2019

Published

on

Modi-Shah

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is likely to effect a mammoth rejig of his council of ministers on Sunday. The exercise will keep in mind the BJP’s strategy for the 2019 Lok Sabha polls and elections to nearly a dozen state assemblies due over the next year

A slew of resignations tendered in by Union ministers like Uma Bharati, Rajiv Pratap Rudy, Faggan Singh Kulaste, Mahendra Pandey and Radha Mohan Singh over the past 24 hours, has put in top gear Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s plan of effecting a mammoth cabinet reshuffle that is likely to take place on Sunday.

The cabinet reshuffle, sources say, will not be a cosmetic exercise meant purely to fill the many vacant positions in Modi’s council of ministers”. Instead, as a senior BJP leader pointed out, it will be extensive, “with an emphasis on performance and also keeping in mind the party’s strategy for nearly a dozen elections to state assemblies that are due over the next year in the run up to the all important Lok Sabha polls in 2019.”

Uma-RudyClear pointers for the cabinet reshuffle had begun emerging on Thursday with Union finance minister Arun Jaitley indicating at a press briefing that he may not hold the additional charge of the defence portfolio for very long. This was followed late on Thursday evening by a slew of Union ministers who offered their resignations. These ministers include Uma Bharati (minister for water resources and Ganga rejuvenation – citing her health problems), Rajiv Pratap Rudy (skill development), Radha Mohan Singh (agriculture), Faggan Singh Kulaste (health), among others.

The Prime Minister is also expected to make some changes among the important ‘top five’ cabinet posts – although Sushma Swaraj and Rajnath Singh as external affairs and home ministers respectively are not likely to see a change in their roles, finance minister Arun Jaitley is likely to shed his additional portfolio of defence – a charge that he was burdened with after Manohar Parrikar quit the post to become chief minister of Goa. Similarly, railway minister Suresh Prabhu, who had offered to resign last week after two major rail derailments – of the Utkal Express and then the Kaifiyat Express – happened within days of each other, is likely to be moved to the environment portfolio – a charge he had earlier held in the Atal Bihari Vajpayee cabinet.Nitin Gadkari Sources say the list of top gainers in the cabinet rejig could include road, surface transport and shipping minister Nitin Gadkari – who is likely to be moved up as the railway minister in place of Prabhu – and textile minister Smriti Irani. While there is a buzz that Modi might even carve a mammoth transport and mobility portfolio – which would include road and surface transport, shipping as well as railways – and install Gadkari as its minister, Irani is likely to retain the additional charge of the crucial Information and Broadcasting ministry, which was given to her after Venkaiah Naidu resigned from the cabinet to become India’s vice president. It is pertinent to recall that in the last cabinet reshuffle by Modi, Irani – who had then held the important human resource development portfolio was moved to the textile ministry, a move that was seen as downgrading her importance in Team Modi.

With elections to states like Himachal Pradesh, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Karnataka due over the next 14 months, Modi and BJP national president Amit Shah are also likely to make some inductions from these states while a few ministers from these states may be relieved from their central duties to focus on their home states.

JP NaddaThere is a buzz that Modi might relieve health minister JP Nadda from his cabinet role and ask him to focus on the upcoming Himachal Pradesh elections – where he could be projected as the party’s chief ministerial candidate to take on Congress’ Veer Bhadra Singh. Former Himachal Pradesh chief minister Prem Kumar Dhumal or his son Anurag Thakur could be inducted into the council of ministers to represent Himachal. The name of Himachal BJP leader Satpal Singh is also doing the rounds for a minister of state berth. Similarly, BJP leaders Suresh Angadi and Prahlad Joshi (from Karnataka) and Prahlad Patel (from MP) may be inducted into Team Modi while commerce minister Nirmala Sitharaman could be eased out of the cabinet to return to her earlier avatar of BJP spokesperson, albeit with an elevated profile.

Given the BJP’s recent alliance with the Nitish Kumar faction of Janata Dal (United) in Bihar, the cabinet expansion is also set to see induction of at least two ministers of state from the JD (U) while talk of also taking in a cabinet minister from the party is still being finalised. Sources said names of JD (U) leaders RCP Singh, Santosh Kushwaha, KC Tyagi and Rajiv ‘Lallan’Singh are doing the rounds for possible induction into Modi’s council of ministers.

There was some speculation earlier that, in a bid to expand the already massive NDA coalition, Modi and Shah could formalise a pact with Sharad Pawar’s NCP and the AIADMK – and members from both these parties could also be inducted. However, while Pawar seems undecided on dumping his alliance with the Congress in favour of the BJP for now, the factional feuds within the AIADMK in Tamil Nadu have forced the BJP to keep the plan of inducting a member of the party as a central minister have been put on hold.

The Union council of ministers currently has 72 ministers – 24 cabinet rank, 12 MoS (independent charge) and 36 MoS. The total number of ministers in the council cannot exceed 81. This means Modi can add nine more ministers for now while replacing as many existing ministers with new ones as he likes. However, while he is expected to fill several vacant seats, the Prime Minister is likely to keep some slots vacant in case inductions from the AIADMK and NCP have to be made in the near future.

Sources said Modi could also ease out a few veterans, like Kalraj Mishra, who have exceeded the party’s age-bar of 75 years for ministerial roles and move them to gubernatorial roles as several posts of Governors are also likely to be filled in the coming months. Similarly some ministers of state with independent charge – like Dr Jitendra Singh and Prakash Javadekar may also be elevated to a cabinet rank.

India News

Rahul Gandhi, Rajnath Singh clash in Lok Sabha over ex-Army chief’s unpublished book on Ladakh

Lok Sabha proceedings were disrupted after Rahul Gandhi cited an unpublished book by former Army chief General MM Naravane on the Ladakh stand-off, drawing objections from Rajnath Singh and other BJP leaders.

Published

on

Rahul Gandhi

A sharp confrontation unfolded in the Lok Sabha on Monday after Leader of Opposition Rahul Gandhi referred to an unpublished book by former Army chief General MM Naravane while speaking on the 2020 India-China Ladakh stand-off, prompting strong objections from treasury benches.

Rahul Gandhi began his address by holding a printout of a magazine article that carried an essay on General Naravane’s yet-to-be-published memoir, Four Stars of Destiny. The reference immediately drew an intervention from Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, who objected to the citation, saying quoting an unpublished book violated parliamentary rules.

Objections from treasury benches

Rajnath Singh demanded that the Leader of Opposition place the book before the House, arguing that since the memoir had not been formally published, its contents could not be cited during proceedings. The objection was echoed by Home Minister Amit Shah, who questioned how references could be made to material that was not publicly available.

Parliamentary Affairs Minister Kiren Rijiju went a step further, suggesting that the House should deliberate on action against members who do not comply with the Speaker’s rulings.

As Rahul Gandhi persisted, repeatedly referring to “Chinese tanks” while discussing the eastern Ladakh situation, the opposition from BJP members intensified, leading to sustained disruptions.

Opposition support and continued disruptions

Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav backed Rahul Gandhi, stating that issues concerning China were sensitive and that the Leader of Opposition should be allowed to present his views in the House.

Responding to the objections, Rahul Gandhi questioned the resistance to his remarks, asking what in the book was causing such concern. He maintained that both the article and the contents he was quoting were “100 per cent authentic.”

The Congress leader also said he had not intended to raise the issue but felt compelled to do so after BJP MP Tejasvi Surya questioned the patriotism of the Congress and its leadership.

Government, Congress trade charges

Government sources accused Rahul Gandhi of setting a dangerous precedent by citing material from an unpublished book, alleging that such references could be misused to make unverified claims on the floor of Parliament.

Congress MP Priyanka Gandhi defended her brother, saying he was not attempting to defame the Army and was merely reading an excerpt attributed to the former Army chief. She accused the ruling party of resisting discussion whenever uncomfortable issues surfaced.

House adjourned amid chaos

The repeated interruptions forced Lok Sabha Speaker Om Birla to adjourn the House till 3 pm. When proceedings resumed, similar scenes played out as Rahul Gandhi again attempted to speak on the subject, leading to further disruptions and another adjournment.

Continue Reading

India News

P Chidambaram avoids commenting on Trump’s dead economy remark echoed by Rahul Gandhi

Chidambaram stays silent on Trump’s ‘dead economy’ remark echoed by Rahul Gandhi as Congress critiques Union Budget 2026.

Published

on

P Chidambaram

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Sunday presented her ninth consecutive union budget, stopping just short of Morarji Desai’s record of ten.

Congress MP P Chidambaram, however, avoided commenting on the ‘India is a dead economy’ statement made by former US President Donald Trump last July, which was later echoed by Rahul Gandhi.

Speaking to reporters after reviewing the budget, Chidambaram said he could not respond as he lacked the full context of Trump’s original remarks.

The comment by Trump followed India’s continued purchase of Russian crude oil, which the US had criticized as indirectly funding military action in Ukraine. Trump imposed a 25 per cent penalty tariff on Indian imports and added: “I don’t care what India does with Russia. They can take their dead economies down together, for all I care.”

Rahul Gandhi later supported the statement, saying, “He is right, everybody knows this except the Prime Minister and Finance Minister. I am glad President Trump stated a fact…”

The remark sparked a political debate, with BJP leaders criticizing Gandhi, while some Congress members, including Rajya Sabha MP Rajiv Shukla, called the statement “completely wrong.”

Ahead of the budget, Gandhi had highlighted the impact of US tariffs on small textile businesses, noting on X: “50 per cent US tariffs are badly hurting textile exporters. Job losses, shutdowns… are reality of our ‘dead economy’.”

The debate gained traction following the budget announcement, which did not offer immediate relief to middle-class taxpayers and saw markets react sharply, with the Sensex closing 1,500 points lower on Sunday.

Chidambaram, as usual, led Congress’ critique of the budget, pointing to a decrease in capital expenditure as a percentage of GDP from 3.2 per cent in FY25 to 3.1 per cent, despite the proposal of Rs 12.2 lakh crore for capex. He added, “Revenue receipts short by Rs 78,086 crore… total expenditure short by Rs 1,00,503 crore… revenue expenditure short by Rs 75,168 crore… capex was cut by Rs 1,44,376 crore… not a word was said to explain this…”

Rahul Gandhi echoed the criticism, highlighting issues such as unemployment, farmers’ distress, declining household savings, and low investment. “A budget that refuses course correction and is blind to India’s real crises,” he said on X.

Responding to the criticism, Finance Minister Sitharaman said, “With due respects, I don’t know what course correction he is referring to. The economy and its fundamentals are strong.”

Continue Reading

India News

Sharad Pawar reacts to Sunetra Pawar’s deputy chief minister appointment

Sharad Pawar clarifies that NCP did not inform the family before naming Sunetra Pawar as Maharashtra deputy chief minister.

Published

on

Sharad Pawar

Sunetra Pawar, the wife of Maharashtra Deputy Chief Minister Ajit Pawar, is set to take on a prominent role following her husband’s tragic death in a plane crash on Wednesday morning. The decision to appoint her as Deputy Chief Minister was made solely by the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP), and Sharad Pawar, Ajit Pawar’s uncle and NCP-SP chief, revealed that the family was not consulted.

Addressing the media in Baramati, Sharad Pawar stated, “I don’t know,” when asked about being involved in the decision-making process for Ajit Pawar’s successor. He further clarified that he learned about the planned oath ceremony on Saturday evening through news reports. “We don’t know about the swearing-in. We got to know about it through the news. I have no idea about the swearing-in,” he added.

Sharad Pawar’s remarks underscore a clear separation between family matters and political decisions. The development comes after the NCP experienced a split in 2023, when Ajit Pawar broke away from his uncle’s faction to establish his own political path within Maharashtra.

This appointment positions Sunetra Pawar to carry forward her late husband’s political legacy, even as senior party leaders maintain a cautious distance from the process.

Continue Reading

Trending

© Copyright 2022 APNLIVE.com