New Delhi: With all eyes on rebel Congress leader Sachin Pilot's next political move, several senior BJP leaders from Rajasthan said on Tuesday that their party's doors are open for anybody who expresses trust in its ideology.
"If anybody with a mass base joins the BJP or any political party, everybody welcomes him. Expressing trust in our ideology, if anybody joins us we will welcome him with open arms. This is a normal procedure," Union Minister Gajendra Singh Shekhawat told reporters here.
Shekhawat also took a swipe at Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot, saying he is behind all this 'propaganda' to cover up the failures of his government which is now in 'minority'.
Gehlot had been working on this plan for over six months and 'succeeded' with the ouster of Pilot from his government, he claimed.
Amid all the political turbulence in the state's politics, senior BJP leader and former chief minister Vasundhara Raje has maintained silence.
Read: Congress suspends Sanjay Jha for 'anti-party activities'
Raje, who commands a sizeable following in the state and has had an uneasy relationship with the party's central leadership in the past, has refrained from speaking on the political affairs in Rajasthan so far.
Another BJP leader, P P Chaudhary, echoed Shekhawat and said the Congress government in the state has been reduced to a minority. A young leader has been marginalised in the Congress as the party has no place for young faces, he said about Pilot.
"So many people joining Sachin is a big thing, and I believe more will join him. BJP's doors are open for everybody if he believes in our ideology. If Sachin Pilot joins us, I don't think there will be any problem. Our national leadership, though, will take the final call," he said.
Also Read: Govind Singh Dotasara: Once a practising lawyer, now Rajasthan Cong chiefThe Congress on Tuesday cracked down on Pilot, stripping the dissident leader of the posts of Rajasthan's deputy chief minister and the party's state unit president, and sacking two loyalists from the state cabinet.
Though the party seems to have the numbers, for now, to hang on to power in Rajasthan, the development deepens the crisis in the Congress which has lost two major states - Karnataka and Madhya Pradesh - over the past year.