Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge told the media that the question of changing Karnataka Chief Minister can only be answered by the party high command. BJP MP Tejasvi Surya asks who exactly is this ‘high command’.
Most users search for something interesting (or useful) and clickable; as soon as some promising candidates are found, users click. If the new page doesn’t meet users’ expectations, the back button is clicked and the search process is continued.
A good website should be easy to navigate
In Short
‘Party high command to decide’ has been Congress’s go-to line to dispel any rumour
Congress chief says ‘high command’s decision’ on Karnataka leadership change buzz
BJP’s Tejasvi Surya asks if not president Mallikarjun Kharge who is party high command
Without website navigation, your visitors can’t figure out how to find your blog, your email signup page, your product listings, pricing, contact information, or help docs.
When asked about the renewed buzz over a possible leadership change in Karnataka, Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge had just one answer: “It is in the hands of the party high command.”
“No one can say what is going on in the high command,” Kharge told reporters on DK Shivakumar being elevated to Karnataka Chief Minister.
“It is left to the high command and they have the right to take further action, but no one should create problems unnecessarily,” Kharge told the media as the rumours regarding factionalism and infighting in the state’s party unit gained ground.
The remarks were interpreted by many as implying that the 82-year-old, the Congress President, was himself not part of the high command. The BJP swiftly swooped in and questioned Kharge’s role.
BJP MP Tejasvi Surya seized the moment to ask the most obvious question: Who exactly is this “unseen, unheard” high command?
Taking a swipe at Kharge, Surya questioned if not the Congress president, who is this high command, who is “always felt”.
In a post on X, Surya took a sharp dig at Kharge and wrote: “The Congress High Command is like a ghost. It is unseen, unheard, but always felt. Even the Congress President, who people thought is the high command, whispers its name and says it’s not him. So eerie!”
.