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This is an archive article published on July 17, 2022

Congress removes former Goa CM Digambar Kamat as permanent invitee to CWC

Senior Goa Congress legislator Digambar Kamat faces a disqualification petition filed by the state Congress unit before the Speaker of the Assembly for “anti-party activities”.

Congress’s Goa in-charge Dinesh Gundu Rao accused Digambar Kamat and Congress MLA Michael Lobo of engineering a split in the party’s legislature wing in a conspiracy hatched with the BJP.(File Photo)Congress’s Goa in-charge Dinesh Gundu Rao accused Digambar Kamat and Congress MLA Michael Lobo of engineering a split in the party’s legislature wing in a conspiracy hatched with the BJP.(File Photo)

Congress president Sonia Gandhi on Sunday removed senior Goa Congress legislator and former chief minister Digambar Kamat as a permanent invitee to the Congress Working Committee (CWC). The move comes a week after the Congress’s Goa in-charge Dinesh Gundu Rao accused Kamat and Congress MLA Michael Lobo of engineering a split in the party’s legislature wing in a conspiracy hatched with the BJP.

In a statement issued Sunday, K C Venugopal, Congress national general secretary in charge of organisation, said, “Hon’ble Congress President has removed Shri Digambar Kamat from his current position as Permanent Invitee to Congress Working Committee with immediate effect”.

Kamat and Lobo both face a disqualification petition filed by the Goa Congress before the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly for “anti-party activities”. On July 10, after only five of 11 Congress MLAs turned up at a press conference called by Rao amid speculations over the possible defection of party MLAs to the BJP, Rao had accused the two senior leaders of working in cahoots with the BJP to get at least eight of the 11 MLAs of the Congress to the BJP. At least two-thirds of the party’s MLAs have to be on board for a merger with another legislature party to dodge the anti-defection law.

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A day later, however, senior Congress leader and Rajya Sabha MP Mukul Wasnik was despatched to Goa from Delhi as part of firefighting efforts. Ten MLAs, including Lobo, met Wasnik, but Kamat had stayed away. The party then appeared to have averted the crisis for the time being.

In April, Kamat was made a permanent invitee to the CWC, the party’s top-most decision-making body. While he served as the Leader of Opposition in the previous Legislative Assembly and, although not declared, was the chief ministerial pick of the Congress ahead of the Assembly polls in February, Kamat was divested of all his responsibilities in the state. Cut up about not being made the leader of the Congress’s legislature party again, Kamat had taken a step back from the party’s activities in Goa since March.

Rao had earlier said that Kamat was resorting to “cheap” and “desperate” politics for “personal gains”. Kamat, had told The Indian Express, “I was shocked, surprised and stunned to see the way he was talking. People of Goa, people of Margao know me for so many years. I have seen such things before. If I had to take any such action, I had lots of opportunities in 2017, 2022. I stayed with the party when we had a clear mandate and still the party did not form the government or ask me if you can form the government and we lost the opportunity. In 2022, I was the only MLA who contested (from the Congress) and I led the party from the front. Most of the MLAs had gone. I still remained in the party. It was so much easier for me at that time (to change party). Who was going to question me?”

Kamat had also said, “There may be some people who may be happy if I go out of the Congress. I have no such intention. I worked for the party with sincerity… My hard work of so many years in the party has no value. It appears like that. You feel sad.”

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The former chief minister has been elected from his fortress of Margao seven times, during which he oscillated between the Congress and the BJP. While his journey began in the Congress, Kamat joined the saffron party in 1994 and won two elections as the BJP candidate. In 2005, he joined the Congress again. In 2007, with opinion divided on whether to choose Ravi Naik or Pratapsingh Rane as chief minister, the party finally named Kamat as a ‘compromise’ candidate. Kamat had joined the Congress two years before he was made the chief minister in his second stint and was reportedly instrumental in bringing down the Manohar Parrikar-led BJP government in 2005.

Before becoming chief minister in June 2007, Kamat served as the state’s minister for power, urban development, mines and art & culture. His chief ministership was, however, chequered. Kamat was accused in a case of bribery under sections of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act. Along with then PWD minister Churchill Alemao, he was also booked under the Prevention of Corruption Act. Alemao was PWD minister from 2007 to 2012 when officials of the US-based company Louis Berger allegedly paid bribes to win a consultancy bid for water augmentation and a sewerage pipeline project in Goa under the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA). The PMLA case is being probed by the Enforcement Directorate and a court has framed charges against Kamat and Alemao.

Kamat, who served as mining minister of the state for 10 years, was in 2012 indicted by a judicial commission for reportedly allowing illegal mining in the state. Before he made his debut as MLA in 1995, he had served as a councillor of the Margao Municipal Council from 1985 to 1990. Kamat, who has interests in real estate, described himself as an ‘agriculturist’ in his election affidavit and declared moveable assets worth Rs 6.87 crore and immovable assets worth Rs 3.21 crore. He holds a BSc degree from Mumbai University.

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