That the Punjab peace plan adopted by the Congress high command last month after a long and bitter feud between Singh, Sidhu and their respective camps was shaky to begin with was always clear. Eager to prevent the attrition of Sidhu – a former BJP MP who had switched to the Congress less than five years ago – and to use him to reassert its dominance on the party, the Gandhi family (interim party chief Sonia Gandhi, former party president Rahul Gandhi and party general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra) had given in to the former cricketer’s demand of appointing him the party’s state unit chief despite strident opposition from the Captain. Further, the party appointed four working presidents to aid Sidhu. It craftily chose the four men – Sangat Singh Gilzian, Sukhwinder Singh Danny, Pawan Goel and Kuljit Nagra – who were known critics of the CM. The only concession that the high command extended to Singh, who had led the party to a stupendous victory in 2017, when the Congress was – and continues to even today – struggling with an electoral drought, was to allow him to stay on as CM.