Ex-Union minister Birender Singh quits BJP, set to join Congress

Update: 2024-04-08 19:48 GMT

NEW DELHI: It will be a sort of homecoming for former Union minister Birender Singh who on Monday said he has quit the BJP and will join the Congress.

Birender Singh who hails from Haryana had joined the BJP in 2014 in the presence of the then-party president Amit Shah. He had severed nearly four-decade-old ties with the Congress to join the saffron party.

If he joins the Congress, he will be doing so almost a month after his son Brijendra Singh joined the grand old party. His wife Prem Lata Singh — a former BJP MLA from Haryana — also quit the party.

“I have resigned from the primary membership of the BJP and sent my resignation to party chief JP Nadda. My wife, Prem Lata, who was an MLA from 2014-2019, has also quit the party. On Tuesday, we will join the Congress,” Birender Singh, 78, a prominent political figure in Haryana, told mediapersons in the Capital.

After quitting the BJP, Birender Singh also met Congress leader Bhupinder Singh Hooda in Delhi. After his son Brijendra Singh resigned as MP and joined the Congress, citing “compelling political reasons’’ speculation had been rife that Birender Singh would follow suit.

Birender Singh was the Union steel minister in the first government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. He also held charge as minister of rural development, Panchayati Raj, and drinking water and sanitation.

During the agitation against the now-repealed farm laws, Birender Singh had extended his support to the farmers.

Birender Singh — who also served as a minister in the Congress government led by Hooda in Haryana — is the grandson of Sir Chhotu Ram, widely respected in Haryana and considered a “messiah of farmers”.

Asked why he quit the BJP, Birender Singh said he had been with the Congress for 42 years but left to join the saffron party in 2014 due to “certain reasons”.

“When I joined BJP, I knew the ideology of this party would be different and there would be some differences between the ideologies of the two parties. Later on, I experienced that there was a wider gap,” he said.

“During my political career, I connected with people who remained dedicated supporters,” said Singh, indicating that this was not recognised by the BJP in the manner it should have been.

On the farmers’ agitation, Birender Singh said he had raised the issue on party platforms and urged that their grievances be resolved. “I felt that while I was giving suggestions, those were not being heeded,” he said.

In reply to another question, he said: “I have said that I may not be in electoral politics but I will continue to be politically active as long as I can.”

Birender Singh said he also felt the BJP should have heeded his suggestion to snap ties with the Jannayak Janta Party (JJP) several months ago and added that the decision should not have been delayed.“I had said that if the BJP continued to have an alliance with the JJP, then Birender Singh would not be part of the BJP,” he added. with agency inputs

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