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Why Congress has become its own enemy in Uttar Pradesh

It has been six months since Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge dissolved the Uttar Pradesh Congress Committee in December 2024 with much fanfare, promising a comprehensive overhaul.

May 15, 2025 / 12:07 IST
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When Ajai Rai was appointed as the state party president in 2023, there was hope that a grassroots leader from eastern UP would infuse energy into the state unit.
When Ajai Rai was appointed as the state party president in 2023, there was hope that a grassroots leader from eastern UP would infuse energy into the state unit.

Despite an encouraging performance in the 2024 Lok Sabha elections, the Congress party has failed to build on its momentum in Uttar Pradesh, the state that holds the key to political power in Delhi. While the party’s modest electoral resurgence had rekindled hope among loyalists, the failure to follow through with organisational reforms has left the cadre disillusioned and the party machinery paralyzed.

It has been six months since Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge dissolved the Uttar Pradesh Congress Committee (UPCC) in December 2024 with much fanfare, promising a comprehensive overhaul. The aim was to strengthen the party’s base and prepare for the 2027 Assembly elections. However, that promise remains unfulfilled — not only has the new committee not been formed, but internal bickering and competing camps within the party have deepened, pushing the UP Congress into a state of confusion and inertia.

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“The Congress had a real opportunity to recapture lost political ground in Uttar Pradesh, especially after the BJP’s setbacks in the Lok Sabha elections,” says Rajendra Kumar, a senior political analyst based in Lucknow. “But the delay in building a strong organisational foundation shows that the Congress is still caught in its old web of factionalism.”

When Ajai Rai was appointed as the state party president in 2023, there was hope that a grassroots leader from eastern UP would infuse energy into the state unit. However, the transition has been anything but smooth. In March this year, when the party released a list of district and city presidents, it sparked outrage among long-time workers. Many senior leaders accused the high command of favouring newcomers and ignoring committed loyalists, calling the appointments arbitrary and poorly thought out.