Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Largest party or post-poll tie-up? Raj Bhavan faces old conundrum

- Zia Haq

GOVERNOR HAS TO INVITE LEADER OF PARTY OR ALLIANCE WHO IN HIS OR HER OPINION IS LIKELY TO COMMAND CONFIDENCE OF HOUSE, SAYS AN EXPERT

NEW DELHI: The spectre of a hung assembly in Karnataka, with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) notches away from a clear majority, has set off a familiar constituti­onal conundrum: who should the governor invite to form the next government?

In separate meetings with governor Vajubhai Vala, the BJP, and the post-poll alliance between the Congress and Janata Dal Secular, or JD(S), have both staked claims . The state assembly has 224 seats, of which polls were held to 222. The BJP won 104; the Congress 78, and the JD(S) 38. The Congress-jd(s) also claim the support of two independen­ts. That gives the combine 118 seats.

Recent examples of Goa, Manipur and Meghalaya , where the governor chose to ignore the single-largest party, were then criticised by the Congress, which is now citing them as a precedent.

Normativel­y speaking, the brief for the governor is simple, says Sanjay Hegde, senior Supreme Court lawyer who is an expert on constituti­onal matters: “He or she (the governor) has to invite the leader of a party or an alliance who in his or her opinion is likely to command the confidence of the House.”

Analysts say a multitude of scenarios and possibilit­ies that have emerged after the Karnataka results make it a tough call.

“If the BJP were to be invited and manages to break the Janta Dal (S), it has to steer clear of falling foul of the anti-defection law. Whatever decision the governor takes, whether calling the single largest party or another alliance, he mustn’t take any unnecessar­y step that could encourage or precipitat­e horse trading,” said GC Malhotra, a former secretary-general of the Lok Sabha.

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