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 conn-ect to people on the ground, en masse, and all the members of the Congress ought to deliver on these lines,” the young functionary tells Out-look. “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 effic-i-ent 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.