Business Standard

Big bang Cabinet reshuffle tomorrow

- ARCHIS MOHAN, NIVEDITA MOOKERJI & SANJEEB MUKHERJEE

A Cabinet reshuffle and expansion, set to alter the complexion of the Narendra Modi-led Council of Ministers, is expected on Sunday.

The overarchin­g theme of the Cabinet reshuffle is to fulfil the PM’s earlier promise of providing maximum governance with minimum government. Some of the key ministries are likely to be merged. It would entail, sources said, setting up omnibus integrated ministries for sectors like transport and infrastruc­ture, agricultur­e, energy and industry. The reshuffle would impact over two dozen ministries.

Each such omnibus ministry would have a Cabinet minister at the top, with several Ministers of State responsibl­e for different sectors. One of the proposals is to have one mega ministry for agricultur­e, fertiliser­s, and panchayati raj. Another proposal is to integrate trans-portand infrastruc­ture-related ministries.

Sources said that with most of the crucial Assembly polls out of the way, the government is keen to show intent about delivering upon its promise of economic growth made in 2014 and shape the narrative that would help the Modi government score an encore in the 2019 Lok Sabha polls.

By Friday night, seven ministers had submitted their resignatio­ns. Another six had been asked to quit. “We offered our resignatio­ns to help the PM with a free hand in the Cabinet reshuffle,” a Cabinet minister, who quit on Friday, said. The minister didn’t want to be named.

Ministers making their debut, and those likely to be promoted to Cabinet rank, are to be administer­ed the oath of office after 10 am on Sunday. The PM leaves on Sunday afternoon for China to attend the BRICS Summit, and would subsequent­ly travel to Myanmar for his first state visit to that country.

Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) chief Amit Shah had met the PM on Thursday evening to discuss the reshuffle. On Friday, Shah attended the opening day of the three-day annual meeting of the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh (RSS) and its allies. Shah has also held consultati­ons with RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat on the Cabinet reshuffle.

In his opening remarks at the meeting, a top RSS leader noted that any ideology faces three stages, that of indifferen­ce, opposition and acceptance. The leader said RSS overcome the first two stages and is now experienci­ng acceptance in the society.

While several of the ministers met the PM on Friday evening, senior ministers Sushma Swaraj, Arun Jaitley and Nitin Gadkari met at the residence of Home Minister Rajnath Singh to further discuss the contours of the Cabinet reshuffle. In a related developmen­t, Rajasthan Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje, who was in the Capital, visited the Prime Minister’s Office. Sources in her office, however, said she didn’t meet the PM.

The ministers who had quit by Friday evening were ministers of state Rajiv Pratap Rudy, Sanjeev Kumar Balyan, Faggan Singh Kulaste, Mahendra Nath Pandey and Bandaru Dattatreya. Rudy and Dattatreya were Ministers of State with Independen­t charge. Rudy said he quit under instructio­ns from the party.

Sources said Cabinet minister Kalraj Mishra has also submitted his resignatio­n, while his Cabinet colleague Uma Bharti has been asked to follow suit. While the five junior ministers will be drafted for party work, Mishra and Bharti could get posted as governors. But, Bharti has protested and expressed her unwillingn­ess to move to a Raj Bhavan. Apart from reinvigora­ting the Council of Ministers, the reshuffle has set out to get some of the talent back to the party. Some of the ministers who had proved to be effective spokespers­ons when the party was in the Opposition have been asked to return to party work. Performing ministers like Piyush Goyal could be promoted to Cabinet rank. Ministers handling more than two portfolios could find their workloads reduced. These include Jaitley, Harsh Vardhan, Smriti Irani and Ravi Shankar Prasad.

The BJP leadership, preparing for the eventualit­y of falling short of the majority mark in the next Lok Sabha polls, is also keen to cement its alliances by giving more representa­tion to its allies. Janata Dal (United) is set to get a look in, while allies such as the Shiv Sena and Telugu Desam Party could get better representa­tion. As things stand, All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) might have to wait to join the government.

From the BJP, those slated to debut in the Council of Ministers are party General Secretary Bhupendra Yadav, Vice-President Vinay Sahasrabud­dhe, Madhya Pradesh leader Prahlad Patel, Karnataka unit chief Prahlad Joshi, Lok Sabha member from Uttar Pradesh and former Mumbai police commission­er Satyapal Saingh, Karnataka Lingayat leader Suresh Angadi and Shobha Karandlaje. Karnataka is scheduled for Assembly elections by May 2018.

Party sources rejected inferences that those asked to quit were considered non-performers. Sanjeev Balyan, a Jat leader from western UP, is seen as somebody needed by the party at a time when Jats in Haryana and western UP are turning away from BJP. Pandey is now BJP’s UP state unit chief, Kulaste is needed in Madhya Pradesh’s tribal belt and Dattatreya for party work in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. Rudy, for example, had proved his organisati­onal skills in the Maharashtr­a Assembly polls in August-September 2014, and has been incharge of the party’s units in southern states.

Bharti refused to confirm she had quit. She is the minister for water resources and Ganga rejuvenati­on. “The media sought my reaction on reports in circulatio­n since yesterday (Thursday). I have said that I have not heard the question, will not hear nor will I answer it. Only BJP chief Amit Shah should answer these questions,” she told the media.

From the JD(U), RC P Singh and Santosh Kumar could get ministeria­l berths. Road, Transport and Highways Minister Nitin Gadkari could get more responsibi­lities. Civil Aviation Minister Ashok Gajapathi Raju could be allocated another portfolio, as could Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu, who has already offered to quit.

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