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Mamata Banerjee has her way, PM to sack Dinesh Trivedi: Sources
New Delhi: The senior-most leaders of the
Congress were forced into an emergency meet at the Prime Minister's
house late tonight to discuss Mamata Banerjee's request to sack her
party colleague, Dinesh Trivedi, as Railways Minister. Sources say the
PM will accept Ms Banerjee's request; and her nominee Mukul Roy will
replace Mr Trivedi in the Union cabinet.
Not without acute
embarrassment for the government; the Prime Minister had praised Mr
Trivedi's Railways budget as progressive and modern.
But Ms
Banerjee disagrees. She wrote to the Prime Minister earlier tonight
asking for Mr Trivedi to be replaced by Mukul Roy, a union minister from
her party. She also wants the government to reverse the hike in
passenger fares announced by Mr Trivedi in Parliament today as he shared
the Railways budget. Congress sources say that the party says it's upto
Ms Banerjee to decide her nominee to the union cabinet, indicating that
Mr Trivedi's dismissal is imminent. "It's an internal matter of that
party (Trinamool Congress). The Prime Minister will take appropriate
action", said Congress spokesperson Rashid Alvi.
Mr Trivedi has
been punished by his party chief for raising passenger fares nominally,
ranging from two paise per kilometre to 30 paise per kilometre. This is
the first hike in fares in nine years. Mr Trivedi said earlier today
that he had done his duty and "now it is upto God." In a lengthy
interview to NDTV this evening, he suggested that he was prepared for
his dismissal. Mr Trivedi acknowledged that he had not briefed Ms
Banerjee about the hike in fares.
Internally, say sources, the
Trinamool Congress believes that if they don't oppose this hike they
will find it difficult to object to the next petrol or diesel price hike
- something they have done in the past to prove they stand for the aam
admi or common man.
Not only is Mr Trivedi a senior leader from
Ms Banerjee's party, the Trinamool Congress (TMC), but he was also her
nominee to the union cabinet to replace her as Railway Minister when she
headed to Kolkata as West Bengal Chief Minister. This is the first time
that a minister could be fired even before Parliament debates his
budget.
Mr Trivedi was attacked by his own party immediately
after he had presented his first rail budget. First, the Trinamool's
Rajya Sabha MP Derek O Brien, tweeted, "Railway Budget... what was all
that about increasing fares across the board? Upper class... maybe ok...
but all? Sorry, cannot agree." Then, fellow TMC minister Sudip
Bandopadhyay demanded that the hike be withdrawn. "We are opposing
because of our party leader Mamata Banerjee who has taught us to protect
interests of poor people. We have told Dinesh Trivedi to withdraw the
hike. The party has not discussed anything with minister on the railway
budget," he said.
The final word from Ms Banerjee came a little
after 4 pm; she declared at a rally in Nandigram in Bengal, "We will not
accept the hike, be sure of that." Ms Banerjee then headed back to
Kolkata and reportedly wrote to the PM at around 8.30 in the evening
asking that Mr Trivedi be removed. She has also summoned Mr Trivedi to
Kolkata.
Earlier today, sources said that Mr Trivedi had been
ordered by Ms Banerjee to either resign or roll back the increased
prices. He had indicated that he would not change his mind. Referring to
the precarious financial health of the railways, he said, "The railways
was getting into the ICU and I have pulled it out of ICU. You cannot
have everything together." (Full text: Dinesh Trivedi presents Rail Budget)
The
Prime Minister has praised Mr Trivedi's Railways budget, describing it
as "forward-looking with emphasis on safety and modernisation." First
reactions from passengers all over the country have been largely the
same: that the fare hike is too nominal to really hurt passengers; they
all said they would readily pay a little more for a safer journey. (Rail Budget: Passenger fares hiked after nine years; focus on safety, fiscal prudence)
But
with her 19 Lok Sabha MPs, Ms Banerjee has the power to topple the
government. So no demand is dismissed out of hand. Referring to reports
of her differences with the Railways Minister, Congress spokesperson
Abhishek Manu Singhvi said this was "an internal TMC matter" and said
issues like a potential rollback of fares would have to be "looked
into."
Sources say Ms Banerjee has been upset with Mr Trivedi for
a while now, possibly because of his perceived closeness to the
Congress. He also ran into trouble last week when he said that his party
may not be opposed to early general elections, which means the UPA
would not last its full term. Ms Banerjee later said that her MPs had
been asked not to express their personal views.
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