Business Standard

Sons of 3 former CMS among 43 on Cong’s second list for LS polls

- ARCHIS MOHAN

The Congress on Tuesday announced its second list of 43 Lok Sabha candidates across four states and one Union Territory (UT), which includes sons of three former chief ministers (CMS) — Gaurav Gogoi, Nakul Nath, and Vaibhav Gehlot.

The Congress released its first list of 39 candidates last week. The second list included 32 candidates from Scheduled Castes (SCS), Scheduled Tribes (STS), and Other Backward Classes (OBCS) to underscore its commitment to social justice. Of the 43, the Congress won three seats in 2019.

The Congress’ intent has been to field its front-ranking leaders for the Lok Sabha polls. Gogoi, son of former Assam CM Tarun Kumar Gogoi, will contest from Assam’s Jorhat, instead of the Kaliabor seat that he won in 2014 and 2019. Nakul Nath, son of former Madhya Pradesh CM Kamal Nath, will contest from his seat of Chhindwara.

Vaibhav Gehlot, son of former Rajasthan CM Ashok Gehlot, will contest from Rajasthan’s Jalore, a seat the Congress last won in 1999. Vaibhav lost the 2019 Lok Sabha poll from Jodhpur to Union Minister Gajendra Shekhawat. From Churu, the Congress has fielded Rahul Kaswan, who was elected to the Lok Sabha as a BJP candidate in 2014 and 2019 but joined the Congress this week. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has fielded Devendra Jhajharia, a Paralympic gold medalist, from Churu.

Of the 43 candidates announced, 13 are OBCS, 10 SCS, nine STS, and one minority. The Congress announced its candidates on 12 of Assam’s 14 seats, including on two of its sitting seats. It announced seven of its candidates in Gujarat, 10 each in Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan, three from Uttarakhan­d, and one from the UT of Daman and Diu. Congress General Secretary (organisati­on) K C Venugopal said the 2024 Lok Sabha battle was one

The Congress on Tuesday launched the party’s six poll promises for STS to ensure that the rights of tribals are protected

between the rich, which the BJP represente­d, and the poor, for whom the Congress is fighting.

Earlier, Congress President Mallikarju­n Kharge launched the party’s six poll promises for STS. He said a Congress government would set up a national mission for the effective implementa­tion of the Forest Rights Act, withdraw all amendments to the Forest Conservati­on and Land Acquisitio­n Acts made since 2014, notify all habitation­s where the STS are the largest social group as scheduled areas, extend the legal guarantee of minimum support price to minor forest produce, and re-introduce the Scheduled Caste Plan and Tribal Sub-plan and make it enforceabl­e.

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