Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Newly anointed K’taka CM a Lingayat leader, BSY aide

- Arun Dev letters@hindustant­imes.com

For the Bharatiya Janata Party, Basavaraj Bommai is the ideal candidate to replace BS Yediyurapp­a as the Karnataka chief minister. The 61-yearold is a Lingayat, loyal to the central leadership and a close associate of the outgoing CM. According to party insiders, all groups within the BJP are happy with the decision and believe that the change of power, which could have affected the party adversely, has culminated well with Bommai’s appointmen­t.

Unlike Yediyurapp­a, who was part of the BJP from its inception, Bommai started his political career with the Janata Dal. He worked with senior leaders, including former prime minister HD Deve Gowda and Ramakrishn­a Hegde during this time. In 2008, he left the Janata Dal (United) and joined the BJP.

A graduate in mechanical engineerin­g, Bommai was elected as a member of the Karnataka legislativ­e council in 1998 and 2004 from Dharwad. He was thrice elected to Karnataka legislativ­e assembly from the Shiggaon constituen­cy in Haveri district in 2008, 2013 and 2018.

This is the second time in the state’s political history that a father-son duo has held the chief minister’s post -- after HD Deve Gowda in 1994 and HD Kumaraswam­y in 2006 and 2018. The incoming CM’S father SR Bomduring

BENGALURU:

mai was instrument­al in the Janata Party forming a government in the state for the first time in 1983 and became the chief minister in 1988, after Ramakrishn­a Hedge had to resign over snooping charges.

However, his socialist father is best remembered for a landmark battle in the Supreme Court — SR Bommai versus Union of India — that he fought for five years after his government fell following defections in 1989. The 1994 judgment in that case laid down certain guidelines against the misuse of Article 356 of the Constituti­on by the central government to impose President’s

Rule on states with unfriendly government­s. He had moved court against the governor’s refusal to provide him the opportunit­y to prove majority on the floor of the House.

The selection of junior Bommai comes after several pontiffs from Lingayat mutts in the state had warned the BJP central command against removing Yediyurapp­a, a tall leader of the Lingayat community. The Lingayat community forms close to 16% of the state’s population and has been a loyal vote base for the BJP. His appointmen­t is expected to appease the community, according to BJP leaders.

this term as the home minister, Bommai made headlines over his October 2019 announceme­nt to create Karnataka’s own National Register of Citizens (NRC) on the lines of the one in Assam even before the Union government issued any orders. However, following a backlash, he claimed that it would only be a survey of foreigners overstayin­g in India and no NRC.

He was also a trusted lieutenant of Yediyurapp­a and often spoke in the assembly on behalf of the government.

“Even though he was the home minister, he knew about developmen­ts in all department­s. You would find him often in the assembly, answering questions on behalf of several department­s with clarity,” pointed out a BJP leader on condition of anonymity.

Political analyst and faculty at the Azim Premji University, A Narayana, said the appointmen­t of Bommai was a win-win situation for all stakeholde­rs in the party. “First of all, he is a Lingayat, which takes care of the party’s biggest vote bank. He is close to Yediyurapp­a, which makes the veteran leader less disgruntle­d about the new appointmen­t. For Modi and Amit Shah, he is someone who would be obedient, and since he doesn’t have a strong ideologica­l background, even the RSS can push their agenda through him,” he said.

 ?? PTI ?? Cm-designate Basavaraj Bommai, in Bengaluru on Tuesday.
PTI Cm-designate Basavaraj Bommai, in Bengaluru on Tuesday.

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