Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Anti-BJP alliance talks gather pace as D-Day closes in

- HT Correspond­ents letters@hindustant­imes.com (PTI, AFP contribute­d to this story)

As Prime Minister Narendra Modi took a break in the Uttarakhan­d hills after a hardfought poll campaign, opposition leaders moved on Saturday to try and stitch up an alternativ­e to the Bharatiya Janata Party-led National Democratic Alliance, with less than a week left for the declaratio­n of the Lok Sabha election results.

Telugu Desam Party leader and Andhra Pradesh chief minister N Chandrabab­u Naidu revived his attempt to put together an anti-BJP coalition, meeting an array of opposition leaders on a day a second regional political satrap, former prime minister HD Deve Gowda, backed Congress chief Rahul Gandhi to lead such a formation. The first to do so was MK Stalin of the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam.

In New Delhi, Naidu held talks with Gandhi at the latter’s residence, and also met Nationalis­t Congress Party chief Sharad Pawar, Communist Party of India’s G Sudhakar Reddy and D Raja, and Loktantrik Janata Dal founder Sharad Yadav.

“Naidu reportedly told all the leaders that we all should come together and put our act together,” a person familiar with the discussion­s told PTI on condition of anonymity. Naidu told Gandhi to have a strategy in place to move quickly and stake his claim for forming the next government if the NDA were to fall short of a majority in the Lok Sabha, PTI said.

After his meetings in New Delhi, Naidu flew to Lucknow where he held talks with Samajwadi Party national president Akhilesh Yadav and Bahujan Samaj Party chief Mayawati, who are fighting the Lok Sabha elections in Uttar Pradesh together in a bid to not split the anti-BJP vote.

After an hour-long meeting with Yadav and before meeting Mayawati, Naidu refused to share details of the talks with journalist­s. “You will come to know at an appropriat­e time,” he said, and evaded a question on the likelihood of the SP chief attending a May 21 opposition meeting in New Delhi that Naidu has organised.

Yadav was silent but a senior SP leader said on condition of anonymity that the Uttar Pradesh alliance partners will first have meetings between themselves after the poll results are declared on May 23 and decide on their immediate post-poll course of action. Until then, they will not engage in any formal post-poll alliance talks with any party or political leaders, this person said.

The Andhra CM, an estranged ally of the BJP who has ruled himself out of the race to lead the antiBJP coalition, seems to have emerged as the main interlocut­or among a bevy of political parties led by strong personalit­ies, who have often been at odds with one another although united in their strident opposition to the BJP.

Naidu said on Friday that even K Chandrashe­kar Rao, his bitter rival and the Telangana chief minister, is welcome to join the anti-BJP formation, or Mahagathba­ndhan (grand alliance), he is trying to create. Naidu has already held several rounds of discussion­s with Trinamool Congress supremo Mamata Banerjee, Aam Aadmi Party national convenor Arvind Kejriwal and Communist Party of India (Marxist) general secretary Sitaram Yechury.

On Friday, Gandhi voiced confidence that a secular formation will win the most seats in this Lok Sabha polls and that regional parties wouldn’t back the BJP. The Congress chief , however, refused to speculate about what the election outcome would be.

“I don’t see Mayawati ji, (Samajwadi Party patron) Mulayam Singh Yadav ji, Mamata ji, Chandrabab­u Naidu ji, I don’t see any of these people supporting the BJP, Narendra Modi government,” Gandhi said.

Amid the opposition efforts to cobble together an alliance, Modi, who addressed 142 election rallies during the poll campaign, embarked on a spiritual break on Saturday to Kedarnath, a Himalayan pilgrimage site, meditating at the cave shrine wrapped in an orange robe. Seated on a bed and propped up by a pillow, Modi was pictured inside the cave after having walked a red carpet to the shrine dedicated to Lord Shiva.

He had to take special permission from the national poll watchdog for the trip as election rules prohibit any campaignin­g 48 hours before voting, Press Trust of India (PTI) said. On his trip on Saturday, Modi also reviewed reconstruc­tion projects after floods in Uttarakhan­d in 2013 killed some 6,000 people.

IN NEW DELHI, NAIDU HELD TALKS WITH GANDHI AT THE LATTER’S RESIDENCE, AND ALSO MET NATIONALIS­T CONGRESS PARTY CHIEF SHARAD PAWAR

 ?? PTI ?? Andhra Pradesh CM N Chandrabab­u Naidu leaves Congress president Rahul Gandhi's residence in New Delhi on Saturday.
PTI Andhra Pradesh CM N Chandrabab­u Naidu leaves Congress president Rahul Gandhi's residence in New Delhi on Saturday.

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