The rebel without a pause
KHAIRA’S SIX MAJOR GRIPES
CHANDIGARH: Rebel Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) legislator Sukhpal Singh Khaira, who quit the party on Sunday, is not known to tread a middle ground.
His separation from the party was a foregone conclusion after his relationship with AAP national convener Arvind Kejriwal reached the point of irretrievable breakdown. There was no moment of ceasefire, not even an ephemeral one, thereafter with even rapprochement efforts ending up making things worse. All this has happened in a span of five months following Khaira’s removal from the post of leader of opposition in the Punjab assembly in July 2018. The move led to a revolt by Khaira and seven other party legislators.
Till then, the two-time Bholath MLA had everything going for him. He was not only leading the party from the front, but also going after political rivals all guns blazing, as is his wont.
He had even claimed the scalp of power minister Rana Gurjit Singh, a known political adversary, by digging up dirt on him, but then he turned against Kejriwal for tendering an apology to Akali leader Bikram Singh Majithia over drug charges to settle a defamation case.
While Khaira surely has a AAP hierarchy no different from the traditional centralised political parties with no inner democracy
Kejriwal failed to understand the psyche of Punjabi due to overconfidence
Failed to project a CM face during the state assembly elections
Promised transparency and accountability, but never bothered to hold any person(s) accountable for defeat Apology to Bikram Majithia revealed double standards in politics Hobnobbing with the Congress another example of political opportunism
knack for spotting issues, ferreting out information and the gumption needed to take on the mightiest of rivals by calling a spade a spade, those who have watched him closely say the present situation is a result of his adversarial politics and political ambition. His overbearing style of functioning and penchant for publicity were seen as minuses by some of his erstwhile colleagues.
“Khaira puts himself before everything else with a holierthan-thou attitude. A major grouse against him that created rift in the party was the manner in which he exceeded his role as the leader of opposition and tried to run the entire
party,” said an AAP legislator.
The former leader of opposition, who demonstrated a change in style and became more accommodating towards his colleagues in the rebel group, has commendably managed to retain support of six of the 20 party legislators despite threats of disciplinary action by the party.
However, this was not the first time Khaira ran into trouble with his party bosses. During his Congress days, he had fallen foul of then Punjab Congress president Captain Amarinder Singh and some party leaders who saw him as over-ambitious and was sidelined.