Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Haryana govt

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atiya Janata Party and the Jannayak Janta Party to come together to give the state a stable government,” Chautala, seated alongside the BJP leaders at a 9.30pm news briefing, said. “Our party decided that for the betterment of the state, it is important to have a stable government.”

The 31-year-old Chautala, who formed the JJP after splitting from the Indian National Lok Dal (INLD), has emerged as a force to reckon with. The October 21 state assembly elections threw up a hung assembly in which the Congress won 31 seats.

Minister of state for finance Anurag Thakur first arrived at the residence of Chautala and took him along in his vehicle to Shah’s residence. There, the JJP chief met Shah and other leaders of the BJP, including Khattar.

“Accepting the mandate by the people of Haryana, the leaders of both parties have decided that the BJP and JJP will form the government together in Haryana. The chief minister will be from the BJP and the deputy CM from the JJP,” the BJP chief said. “The independen­t MLAS have also extended their support to us.”

Khattar, who is expected to be elected as the party’s legislativ­e leader on Saturday, said that he would meet the Haryana governor the same day to stake his claim for government formation.

Earlier in the day, Chautala had kept his options open for aligning either with the Congress or BJP, insisting that neither party is “untouchabl­e.” “We haven’t spoken to anyone... the key still lies with the JJP for a stable government in Haryana,” Chautala said.

The focus of Haryana politics shifted on Friday to Delhi, where the ruling party was quick to tap all possible sources of support. There are seven independen­ts in the assembly, in which the INLD has one seat; and Gopal Kanda, a controvers­ial leader accused of abetting the suicide of a woman who accused him of harassment, is the sole representa­tive of his party, the Haryana Lokhit Party.

The BJP first focused on winning the support of the smaller players in the state. On Thursday night itself, Kanda flew in to Delhi and is understood to have met Nadda; he officially declared his “unconditio­nal” support to the party, provoking criticism of the BJP by rivals and on social media, and appeals that it should not accept support of a tainted leader. The party kept a distance from him on Friday, and did not comment on its associatio­n with Kanda.

But the BJP also reached out to the independen­ts. Five of the winning independen­t MLAS — Sombir Sangwan from Dadri, Balraj Kundu from Meham, Dharampal Gonder from Nilokheri, Nain Pal Rawat from Prithla and Randhir Gollen from Pundri — are BJP rebels who contested as independen­ts. The remaining two independen­t MLAS are Ranjit Singh, son of late former deputy prime minister Devi Lal, and younger brother of former chief minister OP Chautala, and Rakesh Daultabad from Badhshahpu­r.

All seven MLAS took turns to meet Khattar at Haryana Bhawan in Delhi and at Nadda’s residence. “Our support is unconditio­nal,” Nilokeri MLA Gonder said after meeting Khattar at Nadda’s house. “We have given our letter of support,” Dadri MLA Sangwan said.

The BJP is also banking on the support of the sole INLD MLA, Abhay Chautala, Dushyant’s uncle, who has said that he could not align with the Congress “on principle”.

The meeting between Shah, Dushyant Chautala and Khattar took place after the JJP leader opened the door for potential negotiatio­ns with partners.

“We will support whichever party agrees to implement our agenda as part of a common minimum programme. The JJP will ally with any party that promises 75% reservatio­n of jobs for Haryanvis in Haryana and continues with pension for senior citizens,” he said at a press conference earlier in the day. A JJP leader had then indicated that along with issues, the party was also seeking a respectabl­e power-sharing deal, including the deputy chief ministersh­ip for Chautala.

Even though the JJP’S bargaining power seemingly dipped on Friday as the BJP stitched together the support from the rest, there was a convergenc­e of interest. The BJP wanted the JJP to shore up its numbers and ensure stability; the JJP wanted to be a part of the government.

The Congress made an effort to reach out to Chautala, too, though numbers were stacked against the party. Bhupinder Singh Hooda, credited with the party’s comeback in the state, accepted all of Chautala’s demands, including 75% jobs for Haryana residents, a common minimum programme (CMP) and respectabl­e position in the alliance. But he made it abundantly clear that the Congress will not cede the chief minister’s post. The offer was not taken.

In Maharashtr­a, the BJP, however, continued to face an aggressive partner, the Shiv Sena, which has made it clear that the mandate merited a “50-50” partnershi­p.

The Sena mouthpiece Saamana on Friday had a headline on its front page, proclaimin­g that the Uddhav Thackeray-led party had the “keys to power” in Maharashtr­a. An editorial in the newspaper also took a dig at the BJP, saying there was no “maha janadesh” — a dig at chief minister Devendra Fadnavis’s “Maha Janadesh Yatra” — and the outcome was in fact a rap on the knuckles for those high on “arrogance of power”.

On Thursday, soon after the results were declared, Thackeray made it clear that he expected the BJP to respect the “50-50” agreement reached before the Lok Sabha elections. This would entail chief ministersh­ip by rotation for the Sena — a demand the BJP is unlikely to accept given that it is the single largest party and has projected Fadnavis clearly as the leader of the state.

Political circles in Mumbai are abuzz with speculatio­n about whether the Sena is bargaining hard for a better deal — including a deputy CM position for Aaditya Thackeray, Uddhav’s son — or would indeed push the envelope on the issue of leadership. A BJP leader in Delhi said the negotiatio­ns in Maharashtr­a would take some time to sew up a deal.

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