Cong blames it on anti-incumbency
New Delhi, Feb 27 (UNI) Conceding defeat in the Assembly elections in Punjab and Uttarakhand as ''people's will'', the Congress today said anti-incumbency was one of the main reasons for the party's debacle in the hustings.
Party spokesman Abhishek Manu Singhvi told mediapersons that no single reason could be attributed to the party's defeat in the two northern states.
''List of causes can vary. This is a subjective exercise,'' Mr Singhvi said.
Pointing out that there has been a historical trend of anti-incumbency in Punjab since last two decades, he said the Congress ''could not override it''.
''In Uttarakhand, too, we suffered due to an anti-incumbency wave,'' he added.
''The Congress has always maintained highest respect for the democratic process and the bowed to the will of the people which is supreme,'' he said, adding ''in all humility we accept the verdict in Punjab and Uttarakhand.'' ''Our performance makes us emboldened to play the role of a responsible and sincere opposition party,'' Mr Singhvi said. ''We may have come out unsuccessful but are fully prepared for the battle ahead.'' He thanked the people who campaigned, worked and voted for the party and those ''who stood by us'' and said the party would introspect and analyse ''on a micro level'' the poll results. ''We believe that in each defeat there is a lesson to be learnt.'' With regard to Uttarakhand, he said, there were many positives for the Congress but the party failed to convert it into the votes.
Mr Singhvi disagreed with the view that the Congress lost Punjab and Uttarakhand due to intra-party feuds and said the partymen worked unitedly in both the states. He also rejected the suggestion that the party's defeat in two states would have an impact on the UPA Government at the Centre.
Reacting
to
suspended
Congress
leader
Natwar
Singh's
remark
that
party
president
Sonia
Gandhi
had
ceased
to
be
an
asset
for
the
party,
Mr
Singhvi
wondered
that
how
with
a
defeat
in
two
Assembly
elections
Ms
Gandhi
would
cease
to
be
an
asset.
''People
of
India
do
not
agree
with
Mr
Natwar
Singh's
view.''
UNI