Chandigarh, Dec 24 (IANS) Just over a year ago, former Punjab finance minister Manpreet Badal was expelled from the ruling Shiromani Akali Dal owing to ideological differences with the top leadership. Now, as the state gets into the assembly poll mode, Manpreet is facing a situation of his closest aides deserting him and his People’s Party of Punjab (PPP).
Two founder members of the PPP, Jagbir Singh Brar and Kushaldeep Dhillon, left the PPP last week and joined the Congress ahead of the state’s assembly polls likely to be held in February next year.
Manpreet, clearly shaken by these founder leaders of the PPP leaving him, termed them ‘backstabbers’. The leaders, in turn, accused him of turning the PPP into ‘a family-run business’ on the lines of the Akali Dal and also levelled serious charges of financial misappropriation. They managed to get Manpreet out of the Akali Dal but couldn’t ‘get the ‘Badal’ out of Manpreet’, Brar and Dhillon said. Despite floating a new party, Manpreet had a soft corner for his uncle, Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal, they said, adding that they would not be surprised if he returned to the Akali Dal.
Manpreet, who is trying to put up a third front in Punjab with smaller parties, including the Left, to challenge the Akali Dal and the Congress, seems like a loner within his own party. Those who joined him when he left the Akali Dal with high hopes in October last year, have left him one by one.
Besides the two founding leaders of the PPP, others who have left him include sitting legislators Ajit Singh, Manjinder Kang and Charanjit Channi and former assembly deputy speaker Bir Devinder Singh.
After leaving the Akali Dal, headed by his first cousin Sukhbir Singh Badal, and the government headed by his uncle, Manpreet had promised to chart his own political course with a new and fresh look at Punjab’s vendetta-filled politics. While leaving, Manpreet had cited ideological differences with the chief minister and the Punjab deputy chief minister, Sukhbir Singh Badal, on issues like subsidies to various categories and the need to manage the state’s finances better. It is another matter, political analysts feel, that Manpreet was feeling suffocated in the Badal clan and the Akali Dal after the chief minister started promoting his son Sukhbir in the party and the government.
‘Manpreet was earlier largely seen as the political heir to Parkash Singh Badal. But in the last four-five years, equations changed in the Akali Dal and Sukhbir now controls the party and the government,’ a senior Akali Dal leader told IANS, requesting anonymity.
Shaken by senior leaders deserting the PPP even before the party goes into its first election, Manpreet has said that those leaving the PPP were ‘traitors’.
‘The doors of the party (PPP) are permanently closed (for them). Even if they want to come back now, we will not take them,’ he said.
News Source: MSN India