"It is not a good thing," party general secretary Madhusudan Mistry told reporters, questioning the two leaders issuing statements to the media on the issues when the Congress chief and vice president are "easily accessible" to them.
The AICC briefing also saw spokesperson Abhishek Singhvi dubbing as "not appropriate" the statements of Singh.
Digvijay Singh had remarked that Rahul Gandhi's silence on critical issues had contributed to their loss in the "war of perception". He had said the party vice-president should be "more visible and heard more" to bring the Congress back on the path of revival.
Singhvi also did not take kindly to the remarks of Maharashtra Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan that Rahul Gandhi's reluctance to join the Union Cabinet cost the party.
He wondered as to what was new as the then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had time and again requested Gandhi to become a Minister. "It is an old and known view".
The remarks of Mistry, who is considered close to the Congress Vice President as well as Singhvi, show disapproval by the leadership of the remarks by Singh and Dwivedi, who have been senior general secretaries in the party.
Echoing a similar view, Mistry questioned Singh and Dwivedi for their going to the press over internal party matters.
