[This was in marked contrast to the situation six months ago, when
External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj got caught in another set of
allegations involving favours showed to another former administrator,
Lalit Modi. At that time, Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh came out
within hours to defend Swaraj. “We want to make it clear that whatever
she [Sushma Swaraj] has done is right,” Singh had said soon after the
controversy broke on June 14. “We justify it and the government
completely stands by her.
The weakening of Shah’s control over the party became even more
glaring on Sunday when, despite strict orders from the party president
to refrain from doing so, the BJP’s Darbhanga MP Kirti Azad went ahead
with his press conference to make more allegations about the
corruption in the DDCA during  Jaitley's tenure. Azad did, however,
refrain from mentioning the finance minister’s name.]

http://scroll.in/article/777015/bjp-bid-to-protect-jaitley-from-graft-charges-reveals-an-awkward-fact-amit-shah-is-on-the-backfoot

NEWS ANALYSIS
BJP bid to protect Jaitley from graft charges reveals an awkward fact
– Amit Shah is on the backfoot

Senior leaders have declined the party president's request to defend
the finance minister in public.
Dhirendra K Jha  · Today · 08:15 am

Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley’s efforts to deflect allegations
that he ignored corruption under his watch as the president of the
Delhi and District Cricket Association have revealed another truth
about the Bharatiya Janata Party. As the Aam Aadami Party first
levelled these charges against Jaitley on Thursday and BJP MP Kirti
Azad amplified them at a press conference on Sunday, it has become
clear that party president Amit Shah is losing his iron grip on the
saffron party.

The first sign of this came on December 17, when the AAP tipped the
BJP in turmoil by alleging  that the DDCA had allowed several
dishonest deals at a time it was headed by Jaitley.  Before Jaitley
became finance minister, he headed the capital’s cricket association
for 13 years, until 2013.

Though it went unreported, the discussions among the BJP brass that
followed the AAP’s press conference indicated that Shah – the man
known for running the party with an iron hand ever since he became its
president in July last year – is not able to enforce his authority
quite as easily as he was able to do earlier.

Strategy is rejected

According  to a senior BJP official, who requested anonymity, Jaitley
suggested to Amit Shah that a high-profile cabinet colleague – and not
an ordinary party leader or an inexperienced minister – should be
pressed in service to counter the AAP’s charges in public.

Shah asked two very senior ministers to take on the task of defending
Jaitley in public, but neither of them agreed, this official claimed.

As a consequence, Shah had to field Smriti Irani, the relatively
inexperienced Human Resources Development Minister, to mount a counter
attack on AAP. Though she did her job in a spirited manner, describing
the charges as “blasphemous and preposterous campaign bordering on
political hysteria”, the silence of senior ministers in Prime Minister
Narendra Modi’s cabinet was not lost on the party insiders.

Lack of support

***This was in marked contrast to the situation six months ago, when
External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj got caught in another set of
allegations involving favours showed to another former administrator,
Lalit Modi. At that time, Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh came out
within hours to defend Swaraj. “We want to make it clear that whatever
she [Sushma Swaraj] has done is right,” Singh had said soon after the
controversy broke on June 14. “We justify it and the government
completely stands by her.”*** [Emphasis added.]

***The weakening of Shah’s control over the party became even more
glaring on Sunday when, despite strict orders from the party president
to refrain from doing so, the BJP’s Darbhanga MP Kirti Azad went ahead
with his press conference to make more allegations about the
corruption in the DDCA during  Jaitley's tenure. Azad did, however,
refrain from mentioning the finance minister’s name.*** [Emphasis
added.]

“I am a big fan of the prime minister,” Azad said as he began the
press conference, which was also attended by former cricketer Bishan
Singh Bedi. “We are all with his [Narendra Modi’s] campaign against
corruption. There is no personal animosity against anyone.”

The cricketer-turned-politician went on to release a video made by
Wikileaks4India and Sun Star Hindi daily about the allegations.

Although Azad did not directly seek Jaitley’s resignation, he made it
obvious by demanding that, apart from Central Bureau of Investigation,
the matter should also be inquired into by the Enforcement
Directorate. The directorate is a wing of the Ministry of Finance, and
an investigation by it cannot be seen fair if Jaitley continues to
hold the post.

That Shah has been on the back-foot ever since the BJP suffered a
massive defeat in Bihar is not a secret. Party veterans, led by former
deputy prime minister LK Advani, openly blamed him for the defeat, and
there was talk of others also being discontented with his functioning.
The failure of his two recent attempts to exercise his authority
within the BJP is bound to strengthen the hands of his detractors in
the party.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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