
But this time, with the ruling UPA-Left combine announcing former Rajasthan governor Pratibha Patil for the top job, and the BJP-led NDA, in turn, fielding Vice-President Bhairon Singh Shekhawat, the campaign has taken an ugly, unsportsmanlike turn. The BJP—always quicker off the mark in such matters—has fired the first salvos against Patil; the Congress, complacent about its candidate's winning margin, initially adopted a lofty tone. But with the accusations against Patil coming thick and fast, it too has begun to dig into Shekhawat's colourful past inRajasthan.

At the time of writing, the party was divided on whether to use the material against Shekhawat. While one general secretary told Outlook, "This is a political battle—our candidate is winning by a long shot. Why should we stoop to the level of the BJP?", another took a different line. He said, "Let's wait till after June 30, after the last date for withdrawal of nominations, when Patil will begin to travel around the country—then, watch out, we will also be armed."
In the Congress rank and file, there is a sense that Patil has been thrown to the wolves, that nothing is being done to either defend her or to put the BJP on the defensive. The numbers may be with the UPA, but it is the NDA which currently has the edge in the spin war. Indeed, belatedly, on June 27, party sources said Sonia decided the accusations against Patil had to be countered. She has now asked Union ministers Suresh Pachauri and Prithviraj Chauhan to prepare a dossier to answer the BJP's charges, and deputed her political secretary, Ahmed Patel, to explain the situation to the allies.

The Congress, simultaneously, fielded Union parliamentary affairs minister Priyaranjan Das Munshi at its daily press briefing. Referring to the accusations levelled against Patil, he tore into the BJP, and described its leader L.K. Advani as "fascist", "irresponsible" and "desperate" for addressing Patil as a "tainted candidate" without "any substantiated document or citing any specific stricture or instance of any inquiry in a court of law". He also criticised the party's "fortnight awareness campaign to mount public pressure" on the UPA's MPs and MLAs to take recourse to a conscience vote in favour of Shekhawat. Das Munshi added that this sort of intimidation by the BJP "should invite the Election Commission's attention to the safety and security" of the presidential electoral college's members.
But this is as far as the Congress has gone publicly till date. But now, behind the scenes, there are efforts to collate instances of misconduct and misuse of power by Shekhawat. Here is what the Congress has come up with:
Of course, currently, Shekhawat is playing cool. While he warded off a query on the suspension issue, when Outlook posed a question on the land scam involving Rajvi, he said, "Ask my son-in-law". And on the campaign against Patil, he said he did not wish to comment.
Clearly, Shekhawat would like to distance himself from the barrage of accusations being hurled against Patil—orchestrated by a crack NDA team, reportedly consisting of the BJP's Rajiv Pratap Rudy, Sudheendra Kulkarni, Sudhanshu Mittal, theJD(U)'s Digvijay Singh and a Mumbai-based businessman, Ashok Khemka. Interestingly, many of the reports appearing in the press against Patil were apparently "lifted" from former Union minister Arun Shourie's blog, the contents of which have been in circulation. The BJP also released it as a booklet entitled Two insightful articles by Arun Shourie on Pratibha Patil, Sonia Gandhi's hand-picked candidate for the Presidentialelection. It exhorts recipients to "Please read and circulate widely."
The first article, headlined Here is how to empower women, deals with the accusations relating to theRBI cancelling in 2003 the license of the Pratibha Mahila Sahakari Bank in Jalgaon, a bank of which Patil is the founder-chairperson, for "heavy erosion in its assets as observed in the inspection in March 1994". There are allegations that Rs 2.24 crore were given as loans to Patil's relatives, and though the bank was on the verge of bankruptcy, she got huge amounts of interest waived on the loans given to her relatives. After that, the accounts were apparently closed. (On June 28, Das Munshi denied these allegations, saying she had been chairperson for precisely one month and eight days, that she had not disbursed any loans, and loans given to relatives had been returned with 13 per cent interest.) The article also says that the Sant Muktabai Cooperative Sugar factory, started by Patil, was closed down after running up a loan default of nearly Rs 20crore.
The second article, It is all a BJP-conspiracy? A murder they don't care about, accuses Patil of shielding her brother G.N. Patil in a murder case. It is alleged that she used her influence to keep his name out of the fir and chargesheet relating to the murder of a political rival, Vishram G. Patil, a college lecturer in Jalgaon, and president of the district Congress committee, on September 21, 2005.
Clearly, the ugly war of accusations has sullied the election campaign, eroded Congress president Sonia Gandhi's moral authority and diminished vice-president Shekhawat's stature. Asked how he planned to cover the over one lakh deficit in committed votes in the presidential election without "horse-trading", Shekhawat told Outlook: "I am sure many of our legislators will listen to their inner voice and vote for me. " Does the Congress have an answer to that?
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