Tag: sits

  • Pilot sits on dharna, targets own govt in Rajasthan

    Pilot sits on dharna, targets own govt in Rajasthan

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    Jaipur: Congress leader Sachin Pilot on Tuesday sat here on a fast, piling pressure on his own party by targeting the Ashok Gehlot government in Rajasthan for inaction’ in alleged cases of corruption when the BJP ran the state.

    The former deputy chief minister began the dharna at the Martyr’s Memorial here, ignoring warnings by the Congress central leadership that the move just months ahead of the assembly polls is “anti-party activity”.

    CM Gehlot and Pilot have been at loggerheads since the Congress formed the government in the state in December 2018.

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    Pilot offered flowers at the portraits of Mahatma Gandhi and social reformer Jyotirao Phule before starting his silent protest around 11 am. “This struggle against corruption will continue,” Pilot told reporters while leaving the venue at 4 pm as scheduled.

    He sat alone on the dais for five hours, against the backdrop of a large banner that described the event as a fast against “corruption” during the term of BJP’s Vasundhara Raje — “Vasundhara Sarkar Me Hue Bhrashtachar ke Viruddh Anshan”. The song “Vaishnav Jan To Tene Kahiye” played in the background.

    His supporters sat behind or below the platform.

    No ruling party minister or MLA showed up as they were asked by Pilot to keep away. But several other leaders, including former MLAs Santosh Saharan and Ramnarayan Gurjar were present.

    The Pilot faction apparently did not want to make it a headcount of MLAs with him versus those with Gehlot in the divided Rajasthan Congress. Also, this would have put the pro-Pilot MLAs at a greater risk of action by the party leadership.

    Gehlot did not made any direct remark on Pilot’s move after the younger leader announced the agitation on Sunday.

    But On Tuesday morning, as his former deputy began the dharna, the CM released a video expounding his own vision for the state. “I have decided that I have to make Rajasthan the top state by 2030,” he said.

    “To realise this dream, in the last four budgets and this year’s ‘Bachat, Rahat and Badhat’ budget, I have made schemes no other state has,” he added in the clip, which could be interpreted as an indication that the veteran politician sees himself as his party’s CM candidate in the next election as well.

    Pilot’s fast was an apparent attempt to stall this in the run-up to the polls. But the Congress leadership appeared to have thrown its weight behind Gehlot, at least for now.

    “If there is any issue with his own government, it can be discussed at party forums instead of the media and in public,” Sukhjinder Singh Randhawa, Rajasthan in-charge at the All India Congress Committee (AICC), had said in a statement Monday night.

    “This is clearly anti-party activity. I am in touch with him and I still appeal for dialogue since he is an indisputable asset to the Congress,” he added.

    Rajasthan Tourism Minister Vishvendra Singh’s son Anirudh Singh, who recently targeted Rahul Gandhi for his remarks in UK, was present at the dharna site. Several workers from Pilot’s constituency Tonk and areas in eastern Rajasthan also came.

    As the fast ended, Pilot said the Congress had assured people that its government will take effective action over corruption during the term of the previous BJP government.

    “I wanted the Congress government to take action against the corruption of the former government,” he told reporters. “This struggle against corruption will continue.”

    The Gehlot-Pilot tussle began during the formation of the Congress government in December 2018. Both were keen on the chief minister’s post.

    But the party high command picked Gehlot for the top post in the state for a third time and Pilot was made his deputy.

    In July 2020, Pilot and a section of Congress MLAs rebelled openly against Gehlot, demanding a change of leadership in the state. Pilot was stripped then of the posts of deputy chief minister and Pradesh Congress Committee president.

    The month-long crisis ended after the party’s central leadership’s assurance to look into the issues Pilot raised.

    Gehlot later used terms like “gaddar” (traitor), “nakara” (failure) and “nikamma” (worthless) for Pilot, and accused him of being involved with BJP leaders in a conspiracy to topple the Congress government.

    Last September, MLAs in the Gehlot camp boycotted a Congress Legislature Party (CLP) meeting and held a parallel meeting to stall what they felt was an attempt to make Pilot the new chief minister.

    Gehlot was then being considered for the party president’s post.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • The FAA’s top spot sits vacant as air travel faces a summer surge

    The FAA’s top spot sits vacant as air travel faces a summer surge

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    The agency has an acting administrator, but his decisions don’t have the heft of someone with a Senate-granted mandate to lead — such as spearheading major changes that might be needed to avoid a catastrophe while also keeping up with new technologies such as drones and air taxis.

    Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), a helicopter pilot who leads the Senate subcommittee in charge of the FAA, said bluntly that she’s been frustrated with the delay and that a candidate needs to be put up “as soon as possible.”

    The Republican crusade against Washington created partisan rifts that could leave the post vacant for months to come. Washington, a former municipal transit official and member of Biden’s transition team, didn’t have any aviation experience until he took the top job at Denver’s airport in 2021. Cruz and Wicker, both senior lawmakers on the Senate Commerce Committee, repeatedly hammered his nomination as a patronage hire.

    But now, Cruz has embraced the person who’d likely be confirmed by the Senate the fastest — Billy Nolen, the acting administrator of the FAA and a former pilot and safety expert. That may tarnish Nolen’s chances with Democrats, who are still angry that Cruz torpedoed Washington’s nomination.

    Shortly before Washington withdrew, Cruz publicly floated the idea that he would support Nolen for the job.

    “A number of Democrats have expressed privately to me that they think it is a reasonable suggestion,” Cruz said in an interview last week. “To be clear, I don’t know Billy Nolen, it’s not like he’s a Republican or a friend of mine. He was Joe Biden’s choice to be acting administrator, he just happens to be qualified for the job.”

    Nolen was a long-time pilot for American Airlines before taking on safety-related roles at American and Airlines for America, a trade association representing major U.S. airlines. He then held safety-related executive roles at Qantas and WestJet before joining the FAA as associate administrator for aviation safety in early 2022. Nolen held that role for less than four months before becoming acting administrator.

    Whether or not the White House wants to elevate Nolen, he’s clearly acting the part, including television appearances and a high-profile decision to call a safety summit to try to get ahead of cracks in the system that may be behind the recent uptick in near misses.

    “He’s [Nolen] clearly running for it. I’m not sure Cruz’s endorsement helps him though,” said one aviation industry lobbyist who was granted anonymity to describe private conversations about the White House’s stance. “What I’ve heard is the White House is going to nominate someone in the next couple weeks. I don’t think they are asking the Hill what they want.”

    The White House did not respond to requests for comment. But after Washington withdrew, the White House pledged to pick a new nominee quickly and blamed Washington’s exit on a Republican smear campaign.

    Senators on the Commerce Committee last week confirmed that the White House hadn’t reached out to them about a potential nominee, though Sen. John Hickenlooper (D-Colo.), a major supporter of Washington’s, said he would prefer someone who isn’t already working at the FAA. So far, Nolen has yet to pick up any public support from Senate Democrats.

    In supporting Washington, some Democrats — including Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.), who chairs the Commerce Committee vetting the nomination, have said they prefer someone not part of the revolving door of the aerospace industry.

    In the Senate, Democratic ire is also focused on holdouts within their own party that helped tank Washington’s nomination — chiefly Sens. Kyrsten Sinema (I-Ariz.) and Jon Tester (D-Mont.), who were noncommittal ahead of a committee vote on Washington’s nomination. That vote ultimately was postponed at the last minute. Washington withdrew shortly after.

    Duckworth has blamed “one person” for the postponed vote but declined to say who.

    And Senate Democratic aides also seem frustrated with the White House, with one suggesting it failed to understand the dynamics of the committee, on which Sinema sits and where Democrats have a one-vote majority.

    “You can’t ignore Sinema,” said a Democratic aide who requested anonymity to recount private conversations. “The White House didn’t understand it, and his confirmation hearing showed that she wasn’t on board.”

    They also groused that the White House didn’t account for Washington’s relative lack of aviation experience or the perception among Republicans that his nomination was a patronage pick.

    A second aviation industry representative, granted anonymity to describe private conversations, said the White House is considering potential nominees beyond Nolen and agreed that it is wary of handing Cruz another victory.

    “My understanding is the only person who really wants Billy is Ted Cruz,” the aviation source said. “The administration really seems interested in picking someone else.”

    Cruz said his initial endorsement of Nolen was on a whim, after turning around to speak with his staff during a Commerce Committee hearing.

    “I turned back to my staff and said, ‘What do you think about Nolen? Would it be crazy for me to suggest right now that they should withdraw Washington and nominate Nolen?’” Cruz said on his weekly podcast. “And my guys were like ‘No, that’s fine.’”

    Duckworth said that elevating Nolen to the top FAA job would be “relatively smooth” because he’s already in a senior position, though she was not explicitly backing Nolen for the job.

    “He’s already inside the agency. It would be relatively smooth in terms of him stepping up in that way, but I have not talked to my colleagues on the other side of the aisle,” Duckworth said. “He’s one of the names that gets floated on a regular basis.”

    But Duckworth was referring to the potential confirmation process should Nolen garner Democratic support, which he doesn’t yet have. In the runup to the vote on Washington that the Commerce Committee abruptly abandoned, most Democrats who took a public position, including Cantwell, said they supported Washington because he doesn’t have any ties to the aerospace industry. Nolen, meanwhile, has more than 30 years of experience working at airlines.

    Lobbyists and representatives from the aviation industry who spoke with POLITICO, many of whom work for companies or associations that did not weigh in on Washington’s nomination, said their main priority is getting someone confirmed.

    Another aviation industry lobbyist agreed that won’t happen any time soon, however.

    “It’ll be months — you have the individual work that Senate Commerce will do,” the lobbyist said, adding that getting someone confirmed by this summer will be nearly impossible. “We realize the timeline is not great.”

    Valery Miftakhov, CEO of ZeroAvia, which is developing hydrogen-powered aircraft, said not having a Senate-confirmed leader means “we cannot expect to see the FAA take anything but small steps and it will be difficult to set the strategic direction.”

    For instance, Miftakhov said his company’s attempt to create zero emission aircraft amid growing climate concerns “could end up sitting on a shelf in the FAA waiting for a willing advocate.”



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Mamata sits overnight in ‘dharna’ against Centre, raises political temperature

    Mamata sits overnight in ‘dharna’ against Centre, raises political temperature

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    Kolkata: West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee sat overnight in front of Dalit icon Dr B R Ambedkar’s statue on Red Road in the heart of the metropolis, surrounded by a cohort of TMC leaders and workers under television camera arclights.

    Banerjee, who is staging a two-day sit-in to protest alleged discrimination by the Centre against the state, had Wednesday in a change of stance urged all political parties in the country to unitedly fight the BJP in next year’s Lok Sabha election.

    This is a departure from an earlier decision to remain equidistant from both the Congress and the right-wing party ruling India’s federal polity.

    The Trinamool Congress supremo was accompanied by several party leaders, including Firhad Hakim and Aroop Biswas at the protest site.

    Banerjee’s 30-hour demonstration is likely to end around 7 pm on Thursday.

    Security measures in and around the venue were tightened keeping in mind the presence of high-profile leaders, a senior officer of Kolkata Police said.

    Banerjee started the sit-in from Wednesday noon, protesting against the Centre’s “stoppage” of funds to the state for MGNREGA and other schemes of the housing and public works departments.

    Stating that the 2024 Parliamentary polls will be a fight between the citizens of the country and the BJP, Banerjee had Wednesday asserted that people across religions must unite to defeat the saffron party and save the poor of the country.

    She described the BJP as ‘Dushasana’ and ‘Duryodhana’ the two antagonists from the epic Mahabharata’.

    “I urge every political party in India to unite to oust this Dushasana’ BJP government. This Duryodhana’ BJP should be removed from power to save the country’s common man as well as Indian democracy,” Banerjee said.

    Kolkata has been witnessing a flurry of political activity ahead of the panchayat elections slated for this summer, which has now received a green signal from the Calcutta High Court.

    The state’s political temperature has risen by a few notches with rallies by Banerjee’s nephew and TMC leader Abhisek, BJP’s Suvendu Adhikari and a march organised by the Left-Congress alliance, alongside the sit-in, which has been drawing large crowds of onlookers.

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    #Mamata #sits #overnight #dharna #Centre #raises #political #temperature

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )