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          New Delhi, Nov 29  It should have been marshalling its   strengths to take on the Congress with balloting in several states next year and   general elections due in 2014, but India's main opposition Bharatiya Janata   Party (BJP) is instead battling internal demons that have led to strains and   tensions between its top leaders.
 |  Murmurs against party president Nitin Gadkari over charges of financial   impropriety and corporate wrongdoing linked to his Purti Group of companies have   reached a crescendo, embarrassing the party that once prided itself on its   discipline. It was already being plagued by problems in its state units,   including Karnataka, Rajasthan and Himachal Pradesh, but this is a virtual   implosion.
 With the Gujarat polls next month, crucial electoral tests   next year in Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Delhi, Chhattisgarh and Rajasthan and   the stage getting ready for the general election in 2014, the timing could not   have been worse.
 
 "Attention has been diverted towards internal problem   solving when we should have been putting the United Progressive Alliance (UPA)   government on the mat on issues of corruption and price rise," a senior leader   told IANS.
 
 "The mood of the public is good but within the party it is   not," the leader said on the condition of anonymity.
 
 Five party leaders   -- Ram Jethmalani (now suspended), his son Mahesh Jethamalani, Yashwant Sinha,   Shatrughan Sinha and Jagdish Shettigar -- have already gone on record seeking   Gadkari's resignation.
 
 A defiant Jethmalani said he was "ready for   expulsion".
 
 He also attacked senior leaders Arun Jaitley and Sushma   Swaraj for "damaging" the BJP's interests over their letter to Prime Minister   Manmohan Singh seeking appointment of the new director of Central Bureau of   Investigation through a collegium.
 
 "I cannot account for their lack of   wisdom," he said. "Even a Congress agent won't be able to do such work (to   benefit the Congress)."
 
 Though Jaitley refused to comment and many others   dismissed Jethmalani as an eccentric, the open mud-slinging has come as a shock   for the rank and file of the party.
 
 Jethmalani has also alleged that   Jaitley may have played a role in the litigation filed by Delhi Police   Commissioner Neeraj Kumar in the Central Administrative Tribunal (CAT) following   the appontment of Ranjit Sinha as the new CBI director. The party has rejected   the allegation.
 
 Party sources said the growing dissent has triggered   rethink on the possibility of Gadkari getting another term.
 
 "I think the   present situation (in the party) is a little volatile. However, things will be   normal once it is clear who will be the next president. Till that time some   imbalance will remain," another party leader said, putting a question mark on   the future of Gadkari who took over in 2009.
 
 Though the party's core   committee gave Gadkari a clean chit on the basis of findings of S. Gurumurthy, a   financial analyst associated with the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, the dissent   against him has been resurfacing.
 
 A decision on the choice of the next   president is likely to be taken after the results of the Himachal Pradesh and   Gujarat polls next month. The issue of who would be its prime ministerial   candidate is also expected to crop up after the poll results.
 
 With so   much focus on its internal troubles, the BJP's nationwide protests last week   against the UPA government on issues of price rise and corruption virtually went   unnoticed. Its campaign on the coal block allocations also appears to be   waning.
 
 The BJP has not been able to evolve broader opposition unity on   the contentious issue of foreign direct investment in multi-brand   retail.
 
 BJP sources said the party is stuck with a situation where,   barring Advani, the top hierarchy now has a string of leaders considered "equal"   in stature.
 
 Officially though, BJP leaders were gung-ho.
 
 "Ups and   downs keep coming but we are concentrating on our goals," Maya Singh, chief whip   of the party in the Rajya Sabha, told IANS.
 
    
	
	
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