Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

Oppn fumes over BJP’s nomination

PRESIDENTI­AL POLL Says ruling party did not consult them, may name own candidate on June 22

- Saubhadra Chatterji letters@hindustant­imes.com

Hours after the BJP announced Bihar governor Ram Nath Kovind as its Presidenti­al candidate, Gopalkrish­na Gandhi – seen as the Left’s choice for the top post— seemed to take himself out of contention.

While the Opposition mounted an attack on the ruling BJP, accusing it of not consulting them before nominating Kovind, Gopalkrish­na Gandhi thanked “all those who wanted to see me contest the election and perchance to win it”. Talking to Hindustan Times, he said that his supporters trust had been “no less fulfilling than a realisatio­n of their wish would have been”.

The Opposition will meet on June 22, a day before Kovind files his nomination to the Lok Sabha secretary general, to decide the next course of action.

“Congress does not want to comment on NDA’s candidate. We want to take a unanimous decision with other opposition parties. The final call will be taken on June 22,” leader of Opposition in Rajya Sabha, Ghulam Nabi Azad, said.

Although the Opposition claimed that the BJP ‘unilateral­ly’ took a call on Kovind’s candidatur­e, Union minister M Venkaiah Naidu maintained that the Bihar governor was nominated after keeping in mind the suggestion­s of ‘some Opposition parties’.

Naidu indicated that the BJP had opted for a person with a clean image, who belonged to a weaker section of the country.

Azad, however, said the atrocities on Dalits in Saharanpur and other areas are a clear example that minorities, backwards and Dalits were not “priorities” for the BJP.

West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee suggested that foreign minister Sushma Swaraj or BJP patriarch LK Advani could have been a better Presidenti­al candidate. “There are other big Dalit leaders in the country. Just because he (Kovind) was a leader of the BJP’s Dalit Morcha, they have nominated him,” she said and added that in order to support someone, “we must know the person”.

However, there are signs that all the opposition parties might not share the same views when it comes to Kovind’s nomination. Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) chief Mayawati said she can’t take a “negative” stand on a dalit candidate. “Our stand will be positive provided the opposition does not field any Dalit for the top post,” she said.

The Left, which has been backing Gopalkrish­na Gandhi’s candidatur­e, was in no mood to quit without a fight. “There will be a contest,” Communist Party of India (Marxist) general secretary Sitaram Yechury told Hindustan Times.

On his part, Gopalkrish­na Gandhi said he hoped for “the best thing” to happen for India.

“May the one chosen by destiny to occupy the onerous office this year bring to it something of Rajen babu’s sagacity, Dr Radhakrish­nan’s wisdom and Zakir sahib’s nobility, and a large measure of the alert independen­tmindednes­s of President R Narayanan,” he said.

When asked if he is opting out of the contest, Gandhi replied, “I had never entered a contest as no name whether mine or anyone else’s had been decided upon.”

Former Lok Sabha speaker Meira Kumar is also seen as a possible Opposition Presidenti­al candidate

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