Business Standard

BJP set to achieve working majority in RS

- ARCHIS MOHAN More on business-standard.com

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on Friday moved closer to a ‘working’ majority in the Rajya Sabha as it improved its tally from 58 seats to 68 seats. Its biggest gains came from Uttar Pradesh. It won 9 of the 10 seats from Uttar Pradesh, for which voting and counting took place on Friday.

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on Friday moved closer to a ‘working’ majority in the Rajya Sabha as it improved its tally from 58 to 68 seats.

Its biggest gains came from Uttar Pradesh. It won 9 of the 10 seats from the state for which voting and counting took place on Friday. The Samajwadi Party (SP)’s Jaya Bachchan won. But, Bahujan Samaj Party’s (BSP’s) Bhimrao Ambedkar, who had been assured support by the SP, Congress and Rashtriya Lok Dal (RJD), lost because of cross-voting. BSP chief Mayawati had promised support to SP candidates in Phulpur and Gorakhpur Lok Sabha by-elections in return for support to her candidate in the Rajya Sabha. Among the BJP’s winners was Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, who was earlier a Rajya Sabha member from Gujarat.

At a meeting of the BJP parliament­ary party here in the evening, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the Opposition was spreading lies against his government out of frustratio­n stemming from electoral losses. He asked BJP MPs to make better use of technology to take the truth to the people. Party chief Amit Shah asked MPs to hold press conference­s in their constituen­cies to explain to the people how the Opposition was not letting Parliament run.

As for the Rajya Sabha polls, of the two seats in Jharkhand, the Congress candidate defeated the BJP’s by the thinnest of margins. The BJP won the other seat.

Of the four seats in Karnataka, the Congress won three seats, the third with the help of Janata Dal (Secular) rebels. The fourth seat was won by the BJP’s Rajeev Chandrasek­har.

The Congress lost seats in some states, but also gained in Bihar, Gujarat and Karnataka, which kept its tally at 54 seats in the Rajya Sabha. InWest Bengal, Congress’s Abhishek Manu Singhvi won with the help of the Trinamool Congress.

In Kerala, the Left Democratic Front ensured the victory of dissident Janata Dal (United) leader MP Veerendra Kumar.

Voting wash eldon Friday for 26 of the 59 seats which will fall vacant in April. Candidates for the rest of the 33 seats were elected unopposed on the last day of withdrawal of nomination­s for the election on March 15. The counting of votes was marred by controvers­ies in Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka and Jharkhand, where elections were held for 10 seats, four seats and two seats, respective­ly. The SP lost the most number of seats, its tally coming down from 18 to 13. The Telangana Rashtra Samiti doubled its tally to six, while the RJD’s went up from three to five. After the Rajya Sabha polls, the BJP is still short of the halfway mark of 123 in the 245-member House, but can now muster a “working” majority with help of allies, friendly parties, some of the independen­ts and nominated members.

Apart from the 68-odd seats the BJP has, its allies have 18 seats. Of the five independen­ts, at least four are inclined towards the BJP. Of the 12 nominated, four have already officially joined the BJP. Of the rest, four are set to retire by June.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India