Digvijaya Singh praises BJP’s cadre system, triggers debate inside Congress
The debate inside the Congress grew sharper on Saturday. Senior leader Digvijaya Singh posted an old photograph of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Then he praised the strength of the BJP and the RSS organisation. The timing looked deliberate. The Congress Working Committee met in New Delhi on the same day. The message sounded political. And it raised questions inside the party.
Singh chose a picture from the 1990s. In the photo, a young Modi sat on the floor. Senior leader L.K. Advani sat on a chair nearby. Singh called the image powerful. He stressed that a grassroots worker rose step-by-step. He argued that organisational discipline helped Modi become Chief Minister. Later, he became Prime Minister. Singh pointed toward structure. He pointed toward loyalty. Then he pointed toward results.
He added a broader message. He credited the “power of organisation.” He also invoked faith. He closed his post with “Jai Siya Ram.” He tagged top Congress leaders. He included Mallikarjun Kharge. He included Rahul Gandhi. He included Priyanka Gandhi. Therefore, he aimed his remarks at the high command. Party watchers read intention. They sensed pressure for reform.
The BJP moved fast. Its spokespersons questioned Rahul Gandhi. They asked whether the Congress leadership accepted autocratic habits. They argued that Singh exposed internal dysfunction. They framed the post as a warning from within. They also framed it as a validation of BJP discipline. The political sparring intensified.
Inside Congress, unease already existed. Shashi Tharoor often praised government policies. His remarks created friction. Now Singh’s post added another layer. Leaders spoke carefully. Workers whispered about direction. Many sought clarity ahead of elections. They demanded a sharper message and a stronger grassroots network.
Singh later clarified his remarks. He said he praised structure, not ideology. He insisted that he still opposed the BJP. Yet he also repeated his reform call. He urged decentralised decision-making. He said the party needed practical changes. He reminded leaders that power grows from organisation. He argued that voters trust disciplined movements. His tone stayed firm. His target stayed internal.
Recently, Singh also nudged Rahul Gandhi. He said convincing him takes effort. Still, he expressed faith in his capacity to drive change. He urged quicker action. He asked for broader participation. He warned against delays.
Meanwhile, the Congress continues its strategy meetings. The leadership prepares for key elections. It also battles perception challenges. Voters expect unity. Workers expect direction. Opponents expect confusion. Therefore, every signal matters. Every post becomes political.
The episode highlights a pattern. First, leaders praise strong systems elsewhere. Next, they ask for renewal at home. Then they press the high command to listen. The organisation faces a tough test. It must hold together. It must energise cadres. It must rebuild trust.
For now, Singh’s post lingers. It reflects admiration for discipline. It reflects frustration with drift. It also reflects anxiety ahead of the polls. The conversation continues. The stakes rise. And the party navigates both rift and reform, one message at a time.
