Congress moves to bridge Church divide to cement its traditional support base in Puthuppally
The Hindu
Congress moves to bridge Church divide to cement its traditional support base in Puthuppally
The Congress has sought to bridge the Jacobite-Orthodox Church divide that, it fears, could sunder its traditional Christian vote base in the Puthuppally Assembly constituency in the run-up to the byelection on September 5.
It seemed not lost on the Congress that the Communist Party of India (Marxist) [CPI(M)] candidate, Jaick C. Thomas, belongs to the Jacobite faction that has purportedly tilted Left, given the government’s “empathic stance” in the Church dispute.
United Democratic Front (UDF) candidate Chandy Oommen, who belongs to the Orthodox faction, has reached out to both sections of the Church for support.
Nevertheless, the Congress seemed unwilling to unpack the Church dispute, freighted with mistrust and confusion, in the election campaign. Instead, it has leaned heavily on the constituency’s supposedly enduring deference to the late Oommen Chandy to help the party carry the day at the hustings. Consequently, the Congress has pitched the late leader’s family into the campaign’s forefront.
Nevertheless, several Church leaders, most recently Cardinal Mar George Alencherry, signalled that politics, and not sentiment, would dominate the byelection battle.
The Congress has also stepped away from controversies and corruption scandals which it senses might be double-edged.
Instead, the party has sought to reframe the electoral debate around the government’s “failure” to mitigate food inflation, “stalled” development, “self-inflicted” financial crisis, fuel levy and high water and power tariff to turn the electoral tide against the ruling front.













