From Karunakaran-Antony to Satheesan-Venugopal: Congress factionalism returns to spotlight
THE latest confrontation between Chief Minister V.D. Satheesan and KSU state president Aloysius Xavier may have been triggered by the controversy over the appointment of Government Pleaders, but within the Congress, few believe the dispute is merely about legal appointments.
Rather, it is widely seen as the latest manifestation of the factional politics that has defined the Kerala unit of the party for decades.
From the bitter rivalry between K. Karunakaran and A.K. Antony to the later power struggle involving Oommen Chandy and Ramesh Chennithala, factional competition has long shaped the Congress's internal dynamics.
The present divide is increasingly being viewed through the prism of the political rivalry between Chief Minister Satheesan and AICC general secretary K.C. Venugopal, whose supporters continue to wield considerable influence within the organisation.
Political observers point out that Satheesan's emergence as Chief Minister came after he edged out Venugopal during the leadership race following the UDF's emphatic Assembly victory. Since then, every major disagreement within the party has tended to be interpreted through the lens of this larger political contest.
The immediate trigger was KSU's public criticism of the government's appointments of Government Pleaders. Aloysius Xavier alleged that the Chief Minister ignored him during a function at Thevara and later complained to the KPCC leadership that KSU's concerns were being sidelined by the government.
The Chief Minister's Office, however, denied Xavier an appointment, explaining that a meeting could not be scheduled because of conflicting engagements.
Supporters of Satheesan have accused sections within the party of manufacturing an unnecessary controversy, while leaders aligned with KSU insist they spoke out only after repeated concerns went unaddressed.
The divisions became more visible when KSU Ernakulam district president K.M. Krishnalal openly sided with the Chief Minister, dismissing the controversy as a planned move and questioning why objections were being raised now over appointments involving lawyers who had long since embraced the Congress ideology.
The absence of a full-fledged KPCC leadership and an effective coordination mechanism between the party and the government has only deepened the uncertainty.
Even routine organisational issues are increasingly spilling into the public domain, providing the Opposition with political ammunition.
The timing makes the episode particularly sensitive.
Saturday marks the third death anniversary of former Chief Minister Oommen Chandy, a leader widely credited with keeping competing factions under one roof despite intense rivalries.
As Congress leaders gather to pay tribute to Chandy, the escalating Satheesan-KSU standoff is likely to dominate political discussions, underlining once again that managing the party's internal equations remains as challenging as governing the state.