Rather than running the government, the 137-year-old party’s focus has, over time, shifted towards running the party. “The party realises it needs to engage in a lot of activism, and connect to people on the ground, en masse, and all the members of the Congress ought to deliver on these lines,” the young functionary tells Outlook. “But some leaders, especially those of the older generations, only want to sit in their cosy cabins,” he adds. They could be good ministers, he says, but are not efficient leaders and are now lying dormant. Other functionaries similarly believe that many older leaders, clueless about what to do, have realised that they are a misfit for the present-day Congress and want to exit. “They just want to find an escape from the party and make sure while leaving, they sling mud on individuals like Rahul Gandhi,” says a senior party worker who has been with the Congress for over a decade. He adds that the older lot is not used to running party machinery or garnering electoral mileage.