ANI
New Delhi, September 30
Congress presidential candidate Shashi Tharoor has landed in a controversy on Friday as the manifesto shared by him for the election shows a “distorted map of India” in which he has omitted parts of Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh.
He shared the distorted map of India, where he talked about ‘decentralization of the organization’.
Congress presidential candidate Shashi Tharoor’s manifesto for the election shows a distorted map of India, part of Jamp;K omitted from Dr Tharoor’s manifesto.
(Document source: Shashi Tharoor’s Office) pic.twitter.com/Xo47XUirlL
— ANI (@ANI) September 30, 2022
Later, he issued a clarification over the map blunder stating that “no one does such things on purpose” and added that team of volunteers had committed a mistake. He rectified the blunder by replacing it with the correct map of India in his election manifesto.
Re the troll storm on a manifesto map: No one does such things on purpose. A small team of volunteers made a mistake. We rectified it immediately amp;I apologise unconditionally for the error. Here’s the manifesto:
English: https://t.co/aKPpji9Z8M
Hindi: https://t.co/7tnkY9kTiO
— Shashi Tharoor (@ShashiTharoor) September 30, 2022
The goof-up by Tharoor, who is running for the president’s post of the country’s oldest party does not show good precedent. This is not the first time the Lok Sabha MP has shared a distorted map of India. Earlier in 2019, Tharoor shared a ‘distorted’ map of India on Twitter. The northernmost territory of the country was missing from the map shared by the Congress leader.
Tharoor has issued a manifesto explaining how he intends to rejuvenate the party through decentralisation and internal reorganisation if he wins the election.
“Every party needs leadership, but at all levels and not just at the top. The Congress must empower the party in the states by giving real authority to the PCC Presidents, decentralize authority and truly empower the grassroots office-bearers of the party. We must provide a credible alternative to the BJP ‘s centralization of authority in its party affairs and in the affairs of governance. Re-imagining the organization, delegating powers to state, district and block leaders and empowering grassroots workers will not only free the new leader from the onerous burdens of over-administration, but help create the strong state leadership that in past eras strengthened the Congress’ national appeal,” the Congress leader’s manifesto reads.
He also promised to increase focus on youth and to give a bigger role to women in the party “The Congress will support leadership by women, for women, in keeping with the “Ladki hoon, lad sakti hoon” principle. Women will be encouraged to take up issues that actually matter to women in our society. More positions for women should be reserved in PCCs and in the electoral fray. The party will work to pass the Women’s Reservation Bill. In these efforts, the role and capacity of All India Mahila Congress will be strengthened,” the manifesto reads.
Tharoor filed his nomination at the All India Congress Committee (AICC) office in the national capital. Before that, he visited the Raj Ghat to pay homage to Mahatma Gandhi.
“There is a need for decentralisation in this party. We are not an election machine for winning elections every five years. We must serve the people of India,” Tharoor said.
He said the manifesto explains “how we hope to rejuvenate the party, to decentralize the organisation of the party”.
The senior Congress leader also hit out at the BJP government at the Centre, saying things are “not really functioning properly” in the country.
“We have seen that things are not really functioning properly in our country: demonetisation, historical unemployment, inflation. Congress should be the party to bring change,” he said.
Tharoor will primarily take on another veteran leader of the Congress, Mallikarjun Kharge, for the party president post. Jharkhand Congress leader KN Tripathi, too, has filed his nomination.
Earlier, Digvijaya Singh and Ashok Gehlot said that they have dropped out of the race.
The former Madhya Pradesh chief minister visited Kharge at his residence this morning. “I told him that I stand by him and can’t even think of contesting against him, I will be his proposer,” Singh told reporters.
Nominations for the post of Congress president closed at 3 pm today and results will be declared on October 19.