Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Guv picks BJP, gives 15 days for floor test

- HT Correspond­ents

BENGALURU/NEWDELHI: Karnataka governor Vajubhai Vala invited the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) BS Yeddyurapp­a to form the government in the state on the basis of being the leader of the single largest party, provoking an immediate and angry reaction from the Congress, which challenged the decision in the Supreme Court.

“The governor has violated all democratic principles by sending his invitation letter late in the night and calling for a swearing-in early in the morning the very next day,” said KC Venugopal, Congress general secretary in charge of the state.

Ashok Gehlot, the party’s general secretary in charge of organisati­on, alleged that the governor was acting on the instructio­ns of PM Narendra Modi and BJP president Amit Shah. “This is blatant misuse of power. They have destroyed all the institutio­ns.”

The BJP, which has 104 seats in the 224-member legislatur­e (the current strength is 222 as voting in two seats has been deferred), still eight short of the simple majority required, said its government would be sworn in on Thursday at 9am. No central leader from the p

arty is expected to attend the swearing-in ceremony.

Vala has given Yeddyurapp­a 15 days to prove his majority on the floor of the House, prompting analysts to fear that the BJP will use this period to convince legislator­s of the Congress and the Janata Dal (Secular) to abstain from voting. The Congress also objected to the length of time provided to the BJP.

Constituti­onal expert Babu Mathew, professor at the National Law School of India University, said while there might have been precedents in the past, the judgment of the Supreme Court in the case of the Goa assembly was clear that the coalition or party with the majority was to be invited to form the government.

“While the general rule is that the single largest party should be invited to form the government, this does not hold if the party does not have a simple majority,” Mathew said.

“If it is clear the party does not have a majority, and it is still invited to prove its majority, then the door is being opened for horse-trading.”

The Congress and the JD(S) forged a post-poll alliance immediatel­y after the elections, when it became clear that the former, with 78 seats, could not form a government.

The Congress has agreed to support a JD(S) government headed by HD Kumaraswam­y as CM, and the two partners submitted a letter, with the signatures of 116 legislator­s, to the governor on Wednesday. This was preceded by Yeddyurapp­a staking his own claim.

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