Gujarat CM Narendra Modi and two
other ousted Chief Ministers on Friday kept away from the BJP's two-day
National Executive meeting in New Delhi raising questions over the
leadership race but party president Nitin Gadkari hailed LK Advani's
proposed yatra for good governance and clean politics.
The
apparent differences among the top leaders came to the fore with Modi
staying put in Ahmedabad citing Navratra fasts as the reason for not
attending the conclave that aims to target the government on corruption
and focus on coming state elections.
To
add to party's discomfort, B S Yeddyurappa and Ramesh Pokhriyal,
recently removed as Chief Ministers of Karnataka and Uttarakhand also
did not attend the meeting as they are said to be sulking.
In
the midst of perceived growing differences between Advani and Modi,
Gadkari said in his Presidential speech that Advani is a leader with
unblemished political career of 50 years and has "all the moral
authority" to lead the party in the struggle for good governance and
clean politics.
"Through
our Jan Chetna Yatra we will try to focus on multi-sector reforms like
administrative reforms, electoral reforms, judicial reforms and
political reforms," Gadkari said.
He
said through the nation-wide yatra of Advani commencing from Bihar on
October 11, good governance and clean politics will now become the focus
of public discourse.
Differences
are believed to have cropped up between Advani and Modi over projection
of Prime Ministerial candidate in the next elections. Modi fancies
himself to be such a candidate while Advani is believed to have not
given up his claim for being projected for the post.
BJP,
however, downplayed the reported differences between the two senior
leaders and said reports of Modi being unhappy with the yatra were
wrong.
"It
is not true that Modi is unhappy. He fasts during Navratra and so is
not attending the National Executive," BJP Chief spokesperson Ravi
Shankar Prasad said.
However, he admitted that the party had requested Modi to attend, a point made by Gadkari on Thursday.
BJP
leaders close to Modi spoke in his favour with one MP from Gujarat
saying the development model in the state was worth emulating.
Party
Rajya Sabha MP and Gujarat in-charge Balbir Punj said, "If he (Modi)
gets a chance, he will be the best Prime Minister in the history of the
country."
Asked
if Modi or Advani would make a better Prime Minister, Punj said, "I do
not know this. I will not make any comparisons. That the people of the
nation will decide."
In
his Address, Gadkari took on the UPA government over the issue of
corruption and specially targeted Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
"The
government today suffers from a crisis of credibility. Its domestic
credibility stands tattered while its international credibility has
suffered a serious dent. Corruption has broken all records," Gadkari
said.
Attacking
Singh, he said, "...If the Prime Minister is so much indifferent to the
problems and crisis faced by the government, then why is he in office?
He always has a hallmark reply that he did not know anything."
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