Here are the 10 latest developments in this story:
Speaking to reporters during a visit to Alwar, Mr Gehlot urged his party leaders to "maintain discipline" and refrain from making out-of-turn statements. "[Congress general secretary] KC Venugopal has asked not to give statements. We, too, want all leaders to maintain discipline," he said.
The Chief Minister said the party's focus should be on retaining the government in Rajasthan which votes in about 13 months. "It is our objective to repeat the government. We have given good governance and brought so many schemes in the state, which has never happened before. We have started working towards retaining the state on good governance," he said.
Earlier in the day, in what appeared to be a new bid for his taking over as Chief Minister, Mr Pilot said, "It's time now to end the climate of indecision in Rajasthan." Quoting Mr Venugopal, he had said a decision on "the Rajasthan situation" will be taken soon.
In a swipe directly at Mr Gehlot, he also said it's "dilchasp", or interesting, how PM Modi praised Mr Gehlot as a "senior chief minister" at a government function in Rajasthan yesterday. "That (praise) should not be taken lightly. Everyone knows what happened after the PM praised Ghulam Nabi Azad," he said. Mr Azad left the party recently.
In July 2020, Mr Pilot tried to force a promotion from Deputy Chief Minister by sequestering about 20 MLAs in a resort near Delhi. The message was that unless he were given Mr Gehlot's job, he would break the party. However, his exercise fizzled out because of the modest support he received.
Then, just weeks ago, Mr Gehlot flexed his own political muscle to prove to the Congress that he must not be replaced as Chief Minister. That possibility came about because Sonia Gandhi urged the 71-year-old to replace her as Congress President. Mr Gehlot suggested a dual role - Chief Minister plus Congress President - provoking a public reproach from Rahul Gandhi who cited the party's 'one person, one post' rule.
In response, when the Congress organised a meeting of MLAs in Rajasthan to assess whether a new Chief Minister was needed, Mr Gehlot's supporters were a no-show, choosing instead to meet separately at a session where they insisted that Mr Gehlot should have veto rights on his replacement, and that Mr Pilot must be declared out of the running.
Mrs Gandhi met with Mr Gehlot a few days later - the delayed meeting was intended to convey the displeasure of the "high command" - and he apologised profusely for the actions of his loyalists. At the time, Mr Pilot was reportedly assured that his time may have finally come.
But there's been no action yet against Mr Gehlot's team and apparently no progress in the plans to give Mr Pilot a shot at running the home state.
When the Congress won Rajasthan in 2018, Mr Pilot was told by the Gandhis that he would time-share the Chief Minister's job with Mr Gehlot, as his senior, getting the first half of the five-year term. When Mr Pilot's revolt failed, he was penalised by being removed as Deputy Chief Minister and as the president of the party's Rajasthan unit.
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