Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

It’s still not late, come and talk, Uddhav to rebels

- Surendra P Gangan and Swapnil Rawal letters@hindustant­imes.com

MUMBAI: Uddhav Thackeray has made a last-ditch appeal to save his party and his government. On Tuesday he told the rebels in Guwahati, “As the head of the family, I tell you from the bottom of my heart, the time has not passed yet. I appeal to you to sit in front of me. We will resolve all difference­s in your minds as well as in the minds of the Shiv Sainiks; there will be a definite way out of it, we will sit together and find a way out (of this impasse).”

It was an emotive appeal to those MLAS who might be having second thoughts about breaking their affiliatio­n with the Shiv Sena.

Eknath Shinde was quick to respond. Within minutes of the Shiv Sena president’s statement, he tweeted: “On the one hand your son (Aaditya) and your spokesman (Sanjay Raut) will call us, Shiv Sena workers, pigs, garbage, dogs, illiterate and akin to corpses, and on the other hand, an appeal is being made to the same MLAS to save an anti-hindu government. What does this mean?”

Shinde also made his own statement on television saying the rebels would soon return to Mumbai. “All the MLAS here are happy and united and there is nothing to worry. We will all go to Mumbai very soon and together,” he said in his first appearance before the media since his arrival in Guwahati on June 22.

The MVA constituen­ts, in parallel, are preparing for a long legal battle. According to the leaders HT spoke to, any no confidence motion brought against deputy speaker Narhari Zirwal or the disqualifi­cation of 16 MLAS challenged by the Shinde camp in the Supreme Court would not have any impact on the future of the government.

They however said that the trust vote could pose a challenge to the survival of the government. The ruling parties see the only way to win the trust vote is by bringing at least 20 rebel MLAS back in the fold.

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