Sandesh Prabhudesai
24 Dec 1997
Rejected leaders are better candidates to win the elections, feels the
local ruling Congress party in Goa.
To regain both the seats in the tourist state, the Congress has decided
to field two former state ministers, including one former chief minister, who had lost
miserably in the 1994 Assembly polls.
The criteria however is not their competency but the hold they are
having over their respective communities, which may prove to be a nightmare to the sitting
MPs of the United Front - union law minister Ramakant Khalap and South Goa MP Churchill
Alemao.
The ruling party here has decided to field Ravi Naik, the former chief
minister, to cross swords with Khalap. The former had defected from Khalaps
Maharashtrawadi Gomantak Party in 1991, to head the Congress government.
The Goa pradesh election committee has also recommended Francisco
Sardinha, a former minister defeated by Alemaos United Goans Democratic Party in the
Assembly elections, who will now fight against the controversial South Goa MP.
Both Sardinha and Naik were miserably defeated in the 1994 Assembly
polls and were in hibernation since then. "But their names are proposed by our grass
root level cadres", claims Shantaram Naik, the GPCC president.
As most of the leaders have given their consent to the names, the
possibility of the central election committee changing it appears bleak. On the contrary,
the local Congress leaders seem happy as two ambitious politicians are going away from the
state politics.
In a successful bid, the local party has also persuaded former union
minister Eduardo Faleiro to withdraw from the race, while assuring him the Rajya Sabha
ticket next year. He was the South Goa MP since 1977, till he was defeated in last
elections by Churchill Alemao.
Sensing the mood in the party, even Faleiro admits that Sardinha is a
better candidate to fight Alemaos hegemony in South Goa. "People want new
faces", says the five-time MP.
Though he seems to be happy with the assurance about the Rajya Sabha
ticket, a senior local Congress leader laughs it out, stating that such pieces of paper
have no meaning in the Congress party.
Faleiro however hopes to enter the House one year later, as the
assurance is a resolution passed in the presence of all the groups within the ruling
party, including chief minister Pratapsing Rane, rebel leader and Dy CM Wilfred de Souza
as well as organisational leaders.
While the Congress is eyeing for its Catholic vote bank in the South,
Naik is expected to win over the Bhandari vote bank, the majority community in the North
Goa, which is normally a traditional MGP vote bank of Khalap.
While Sardinhas victory is still doubtful given the mass
popularity Alemao is having, the union law minister seems to be in a deep trouble with the
community card played by the Congress to counter the United Front.