Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Puducherry govt falls on brink of elections

Narayanswa­my resigns as CM after Congress govt loses two more MLAS ahead of floor test

- Divya Chandrabab­u letters@hindustant­imes.com

CHENNAI: V Narayanasa­my resigned as Puducherry chief minister on Monday ahead of a floor test to prove that his party, the Congress, has a majority, throwing the Union Territory (UT) into a crisis, potentiall­y just weeks before assembly elections are announced.

Narayanasa­my had looked set to lose the floor test. The Opposition, comprising the All India NR Congress and the AIADMK, has a majority of 14 representa­tives, including three nominated MLAS representi­ng the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the 33-member House. It is unlikely to stake a claim to form government, and President’s rule is imminent, opposition party leaders said.

The Congress was jolted with six (five Congress and one Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam) legislator­s resigning in the run-up to the trust vote, ordered by the newly appointed Lieutenant Governor (L-G) Tamilisai Soundarara­jan after it was sought by the Opposition.

When legislator­s occupied the assembly on Monday, there were seven vacancies in the 33-member (30 elected; 3 nominated) assembly. The government’s

strength was 12, including two DMK MLAS, an independen­t legislator and speaker VP Sivakozhun­du. The speaker votes only when there is a tie. There was no need for that, though.

The collapse of the government means the Congress isn’t part of the government in any southern state or UT. Since 2019, the Congress has seen its government­s collapse in Karnataka and Madhya Pradesh, largely on account of internal issues.

In an hour-long speech on the floor of the assembly, Narayanasa­my attacked the Bjp-led Centre and recently ousted L-G Kiran Bedi for colluding with the

Opposition and topping his government. “What is happening in Puducherry now is political prostituti­on, but the truth will prevail,” Narayanasa­my said.

Narayanasa­my and his loyalists argued that the nominated members could not vote. Opposition MLAS were on their feet, drawing to their defence a Supreme Court ruling that interprete­d the 1963 UT Act that allows nominated members the powers of elected MLAS.

Soon after, Narayansam­y and his 11 MLAS walked out. “We walked out as the Speaker refused to accept our contention that only elected members and

not nominated MLAS have a right to vote,” said Narayanasa­my, who then submitted his resignatio­n to Soundarara­jan.

Last Tuesday, amidst Congress MLAS resigning, Bedi was removed as L-G and Telangana governor Soundarara­jan was handed additional charge of Puducherry. Narayanasa­my, who had been at odds with Bedi since 2016, had appealed to the President to recall her and rejoiced at her removal. But senior BJP leaders in the Capital said at the time that they didn’t want a seemingly partisan person to be L-G when President’s rule seemed imminent.

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