<p>Jaipur: Two years after leaving for the <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/search?q=BJP">BJP</a>, former Rajasthan minister Mahendrajit Singh Malviya returned to the Congress after the party's top leadership approved his re-induction.</p>.<p>The proposal was cleared by <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/search?q=Congress">Congress</a> president Mallikarjun Kharge, after which an official letter confirming Malviya's return to the party was issued late on Friday. His formal joining is expected to take place at the state Congress office soon.</p>.<p>The decision followed a multi-level review process. Rajasthan Pradesh Congress Committee (PCC) president Govind Singh Dotasra sent a detailed report to the All India Congress Committee (AICC) in New Delhi.</p>.BJP manipulating electoral rolls to remove Congress voters: Ex-Rajasthan CM Gehlot.<p>Raids were carried out by the Rajasthan Anti-Corruption Bureau days after Malviya, a former cabinet minister, signalled his intention to return to the Congress. He had quit the Congress and joined the BJP around two years ago ahead of the previous elections.</p>.<p>Earlier, a meeting of the Rajasthan Congress disciplinary committee, chaired by former minister Udaylal Anjana, had recommended Malviya's return to the party.</p>.<p>However, the matter was referred to the AICC as Malviya had earlier been a member of the Congress Working Committee (CWC), making a state-level decision procedurally inadequate, party leaders said.</p>.<p>Dotasra later said that since Malviya had served as a CWC member, the final decision was taken at the AICC level, and formal orders approving his return had now been issued.</p>.'Blow to self-proclaimed Vishwaguru's self-boastful diplomacy': Congress on US-Pak military exercise.<p>Dotasra described the action as "a disgrace to democracy" and alleged that agencies were being misused for political vendetta.</p>.<p>Malviya, a former MP from the tribal-dominated Banswara seat and a cabinet minister in the previous Ashok Gehlot-led Congress government, had earlier cited his inability to function under the BJP government as the reason for his proposed switch.</p>.<p>He had alleged that welfare schemes such as MGNREGA were suffering delays and that farmers were facing fertiliser shortages, despite repeated representations to the government. </p>
<p>Jaipur: Two years after leaving for the <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/search?q=BJP">BJP</a>, former Rajasthan minister Mahendrajit Singh Malviya returned to the Congress after the party's top leadership approved his re-induction.</p>.<p>The proposal was cleared by <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/search?q=Congress">Congress</a> president Mallikarjun Kharge, after which an official letter confirming Malviya's return to the party was issued late on Friday. His formal joining is expected to take place at the state Congress office soon.</p>.<p>The decision followed a multi-level review process. Rajasthan Pradesh Congress Committee (PCC) president Govind Singh Dotasra sent a detailed report to the All India Congress Committee (AICC) in New Delhi.</p>.BJP manipulating electoral rolls to remove Congress voters: Ex-Rajasthan CM Gehlot.<p>Raids were carried out by the Rajasthan Anti-Corruption Bureau days after Malviya, a former cabinet minister, signalled his intention to return to the Congress. He had quit the Congress and joined the BJP around two years ago ahead of the previous elections.</p>.<p>Earlier, a meeting of the Rajasthan Congress disciplinary committee, chaired by former minister Udaylal Anjana, had recommended Malviya's return to the party.</p>.<p>However, the matter was referred to the AICC as Malviya had earlier been a member of the Congress Working Committee (CWC), making a state-level decision procedurally inadequate, party leaders said.</p>.<p>Dotasra later said that since Malviya had served as a CWC member, the final decision was taken at the AICC level, and formal orders approving his return had now been issued.</p>.'Blow to self-proclaimed Vishwaguru's self-boastful diplomacy': Congress on US-Pak military exercise.<p>Dotasra described the action as "a disgrace to democracy" and alleged that agencies were being misused for political vendetta.</p>.<p>Malviya, a former MP from the tribal-dominated Banswara seat and a cabinet minister in the previous Ashok Gehlot-led Congress government, had earlier cited his inability to function under the BJP government as the reason for his proposed switch.</p>.<p>He had alleged that welfare schemes such as MGNREGA were suffering delays and that farmers were facing fertiliser shortages, despite repeated representations to the government. </p>