"It is unfair to call Bansal tainted. No charge sheet has been framed against him. BJP has been leading a diatribe against him, but the fact is that there are no charges against Bansal," party spokesperson Randip Surjewala told reporters.
The Congress spokesperson gave clear indications that the former Railway Minister will not be denied a ticket.
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The second list or a subsequent one will have Bansal's name, sources added.
A Special CBI court yesterday framed charges of criminal conspiracy and corruption against Bansal's nephew Vijay Singla and nine others who were arrested in the Rs 10-crore cash-for -post railway bribery case when the Congress leader was holding the railway portfolio.
With a row erupting over the case, Bansal resigned from the Union Cabinet.
Surjewala said that Bansal had resigned on moral grounds while indicating that Congress believes that no "convicted" leader, or those found involved in "heinous" crimes, should be fielded in the polls.
"Bansal has not been charge-sheeted. Nor is there any such allegation against him. As far as giving or not giving ticket is concerned, it is a decision taken by the Central Election Committee chaired by party President Sonia Gandhi.
"When that decision, which will be taken very soon, is announced, you can ask these questions," he said.
Surjewala, however, appeared to suggest that there was no similarity between the cases of Bansal and Suresh Kalmadi or former Maharashtra Chief Minister Ashok Chavan, who are facing allegations in connection with the Commonwealth Games and the Adarsh housing scams, respectively.
The duo are said to be campaigning to obtain Lok Sabha poll tickets for their wives.
"Till now, neither Kalmadi nor any family member of his has been either given or denied the ticket for Pune. So, the question is hypothetical," he said.
A senior party leader, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that no decision has been taken yet on giving a ticket to either Kalmadi or his wife.
The leader also refused to see a similarity between the cases of Bansal and Chavan.
"In every case, facts are always put (before CEC)," he said without elaborating further.
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