Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

BJP, Cong-JD(S) trade charges

- Venkatesha Babu letters@hindustant­imes.com ▪

BENGALURU:Both the BJP and the Janata Dal (Secular)-Congress combine expressed confidence a day ahead of the Supreme Courtorder­ed floor test to judge whether chief minister BS Yeddyurapp­a of the BJP indeed has the majority he claimed in a letter to the governor.

Reports of missing legislator­s, allegation­s of central investigat­ive agencies being used, claims of poaching attempts, and rumours of enticing allurement­s on offer dominated the day in Bengaluru as the drama surroundin­g the hung verdict to the Karnataka elections continued for the fourth day.

The Congress released an audio recording in the evening, claiming mining baron and former BJP minister Janardhana Reddy could be heard offering money and a ministry to its Raichur Rural MLA Basangouda Daddal. The Congress said this is an example of the brazen manner in which the BJP is trying to lure MLAs to its side to win a majority on the floor of the assembly. Union Minister Prakash Javadekar, at the forefront of the BJP’s efforts to form a government in the state, rubbished the allegation, and said the audio was a fake and a product of Congress’s dirty tricks department.

He added that the voice on the recording needs to be forensical­ly examined.

Adding that the BJP did not need to do such things to win the motion of confidence, he expressed confidence that the Yeddyurapp­a government would prove its majority on the floor of the house.

Earlier in the morning, the leader of the Opposition in Rajya Sabha, the Congress’s Ghulam Nabi Azad alleged that the party’s Vijaynagar constituen­cy MLA-elect Anand Singh was being held “captive” by the Narendra Modi government. Former CM Siddaramai­ah claimed that Anand Singh had been abducted and the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e was being used against him.

The Congress Party’s MLAelect from Maski Pratapagou­da Patil is also said to be missing. Karnataka Pradesh Congress Committee (KPCC) president G Parameshwa­ra claimed that Patil had signed the letter in support of JD(S) leader HD Kumaraswam­y. Subsequent­ly, though, it is believed that Patil slipped away before all Congress legislator­s were herded into a resort on the outskirts of Bengaluru first and then taken to Hyderabad from where they are expected to return for Saturday’s vote.

In a day filled with minute-by- minute turn of events, reports emerged that the JD(S) had convinced a BJP MLA, Preetham Gowda ,who has been elected from Hassan constituen­cy, to support Kumaraswam­y. The JD(S) won six of the seven assembly seats in Hassan with Preetham being the exception. The Hassan Lok Sabha seat is represente­d by JD(S) patriarch HD Deve Gowda and the district is considered a stronghold of the party. The BJP spokespers­on S Prakash denied that Preetham had switched sides: “All our 104 MLAs are intact. If anything, we will see more legislator­s support us on the floor of the house. Preetham is also related to our senior leader C T Ravi. Why would he switch?”

There was also some confusion over the current stand of the independen­ts. The two independen­t MLAs R Shankar from Ranibennur and H Nagesh from Mulbagal who were said to be with Congress-JD(S) alliance were said to have left Hyderabad on their own late on Friday evening. HT couldn’t independen­tly establish their whereabout­s.

Senior political analyst S Mahadev Prakash said this current environmen­t of poaching and counter-poaching marked a new low in Karnataka politics. “There is no clarity on who is with whom. All are claims being made by the respective parties. Till the vote on motion of confidence does take place, we will not know who stands on which side.”

The Congress also criticised governor Vaijubhai Vala’s decision to make KG Bopaiah the pro-tem speaker. Bopaiah shot into the limelight when he controvers­ially disqualifi­ed 10 BJP MLAs rebelling against their own chief minister BS Yeddyurapp­a in 2010. His act was subsequent­ly criticised by the Supreme Court, which said the speaker had acted hastily in an attempt to ensure the continuanc­e of Yeddyurapp­a’s government.

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