Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

BJP to back CMS in pollbound states BJP MLAS in UP target own state govt after bypoll

Party president Amit Shah to manage Rajasthan campaign

- Kumar Uttam

NEWDELHI: The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has decided to repose faith in its chief ministers in three election-bound states and will face the December poll under their leadership, two senior leaders of the party said.

This comes as a disappoint­ment to those pitching for a leadership change in Rajasthan, lobbying to keep the Cm-face undeclared in Chhattisga­rh, and nursing chief ministeria­l ambitions in Madhya Pradesh.

“Change is not under considerat­ion,” the first BJP leader said on condition of anonymity. “Vasundhara Raje, Shivraj Singh Chouhan and Raman Singh are sitting chief ministers and the party will go to poll under their leadership,” the leader added.

The second leader, who asked not to be identified, said Raje, Chouhan and Singh are the most popular faces of the party in their respective states, adding that there are no alternativ­es with similar stature, even if the party were to consider a change.

“If the BJP has decided to go with them, it is only because they have decided to fall back on its tallest and tested leaders in the state. The party could not have afforded to change leadership on the eve of the election,” Prafulla Ketkar, editor of Organiser, a magazine linked to the Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh said.

The BJP was confronted with demands to remove Raje as chief minister after losing the Ajmer and Alwar parliament­ary, and the Mandalgarh assembly seats to the Congress in the February by-election in the state. Raje survived but her loyalist, Ashok Parnami, was removed as Rajasthan BJP chief.

A decision on Parnami’s replacemen­t is yet to be taken because of difference­s between Raje and BJP president Amit Shah.

But a party functionar­y said that Shah would personally monitor and shape the campaign in the state. Shah’s team is already looking for a house for him in Jaipur from where he can direct the campaign, much like he did in the Karnataka election (from a house in Bengaluru)

In Madhya Pradesh, the BJP’S failure to snatch Kolaras and Mungoli assembly segments in the bypolls in the state, set off alarm bells in New Delhi with the party leadership deciding to replace state president Nand Kumar Chouhan — a confidant of the CM — with Jabalpur MP Rakesh Singh.

“Chouhan is a powerful OBC leader of Madhya Pradesh, and also a member of BJP’S highest decision making body, the parliament­ary board. The party can not discard him like that,” the second leader said.

In Chattisgar­h, the government is headed by Raman Singh, the BJP’S longest-serving chief minister (he has been CM since December 2003).

The doctor-politician is a nontribal, and a section of the party wanted a tribal to replace him after the party appointed Raghubar Das, another non-tribal, as the CM of neighbouri­ng Jharkhand that has sizeable adivasi population. LUCKNOW: The BJP’S losses in the Kairana Lok Sabha and Noorpur assembly bypolls two months after equally stunning upsets in Gorakhpur and Phulpur have made several lawmakers target their own government in Uttar Pradesh.

A poem posted on Facebook by Gopamau BJP MLA Hardoi Shyam Prakash soon after the results emerged seemed to insinuate that while the 2014 Lok Sabha and 2017 assembly polls were won through “Modi magic”, the state leadership was unable to make the most of it.

“Modi naam se paa gaye raaj, kar na sake janata mann kaaj, sangh sangathan haath lagaam, mukhyamant­ri bhi asahay (The BJP won power through Modi but failed to live up to the people’s expectatio­ns. The chief minister, controlled by the sangh and organisati­on, remains helpless),” he said in the post.

Surendra Singh, the BJP MLA from Bairia, also termed corruption among bureaucrat­s as one of the reasons for the party’s loss. However, sources said a leadership change in the state was unlikely at this juncture.

“Yogi has lived by the BJP rulebook ever since he took over as the chief minister,” a BJP leader said.

Party chief Amit Shah is expected to visit UP soon and hold talks with state leaders to discuss ways to thwart the budding alliance between the SP and the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP.

 ?? AGENCIES ?? (LR) Madhya Pradesh chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan, Rajasthan chief minister Vasundhara Raje, and Chhattisga­rh chief minister Raman Singh.
AGENCIES (LR) Madhya Pradesh chief minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan, Rajasthan chief minister Vasundhara Raje, and Chhattisga­rh chief minister Raman Singh.
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