Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

NEW PUNJAB CM

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oath-taking ceremony will be held at 11am on Monday,” Channi told reporters after meeting the governor.

Singh, who resigned from the post shortly before a CLP meeting on Saturday, congratula­ted Channi. “My best wishes to Charanjit Singh Channi. I hope he’s able to keep the border state of Punjab safe and protect our people from the growing security threat from across the border,” the former CM said.

Channi represents the Chamkaur Sahib constituen­cy in the state assembly. Amarinder’s relations with Channi were said to be uneasy throughout his tenure and the latter was among the cabinet ministers who rebelled against him. Channi is considered close to cricketert­urned-politician Sidhu.

His appointmen­t is being touted by some party leaders as a “strategic move” to counter the attempts of rival parties – the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and the Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) – to woo the Dalit voters. The BJP has already declared that if voted to power in the state in next year’s assembly elections, it will have a Dalit CM.

The SAD has struck an electoral alliance with the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP), with the promise to pick a deputy chief minister from the community if they get the numbers to form the government in 2022. At 32%, Dalits constitute almost onethird of the state’s population – the highest anywhere in the country.

The surprise announceme­nt of his name came after hours of hectic parleys that saw the scales tilt in favour of different leaders in the party leadership’s quest for consensus, with some party MLAs, at one stage, even declaring cabinet minister Sukhjinder Singh Randhawa as the next chief minister. The previous 24 hours were full of dramatic twists and turns as the name of former state unit president Sunil Jakhar was almost finalised on Saturday evening with the backing of former Congress chief Rahul Gandhi, people aware of the matter said.

However, the party did not announce it after some MLAs, who met Rawat and the two central observers on the sidelines of the CLP meeting on Saturday, pushed for a Sikh chief minister. “Sidhu and Randhawa were among those who went not in favour of having him in the position,” a senior party leader said on condition of anonymity.

Punjab has never had a nonSikh CM since the reorganisa­tion of the state in 1966. A few others stressed that the new leader should be from among the MLAs. The person quoted above said that Jakhar, who is not an MLA, was later offered the deputy chief minister’s post which he turned down.

Earlier in the day, Rajya Sabha MP Ambika Soni emerged as the front runner, but she opted out, saying that a Sikh leader should be made the chief minister. After the CLP meet scheduled at 11am was cancelled for want of consensus, Rawat and the two observers called up MLAs to know their preference and cabinet minister Sukhjinder Singh Randhawa emerged as the favourite, another leader said.

Some Congress MLAs then began reaching his official residence to congratula­te him. “His name did not go down well with Sidhu who saw him as a competitor in the future,” a party leader aware of the developmen­ts said, asking not to be named. Later, the party leaders declared Channi, whose name was doing the rounds for the post of deputy chief minister, as the new legislatur­e party leader.

Amarinder Singh was nudged into quitting ostensibly over his “failure” to fulfil the promises made by the party in the 2017 assembly polls, people aware of the developmen­ts indicated a day earlier.

The two-time chief minister submitted his resignatio­n along with those of his council of ministers to Governor Purohit at the Raj Bhawan barely minutes before a meeting of the CLP, widely seen as having been called to remove him from the CM’s post. The meeting was announced by the Congress high command late on Friday, and it appeared to catch Singh, who was then the leader of the CLP, unawares.

In a letter Congress president Sonia Gandhi, Singh mentioned his “personal anguish” over political developmen­ts in the past five months and apprehende­d that the high command’s move could cause “instabilit­y” in the state.

The developmen­t came amid a power tussle that divided the ruling party in the state, with Singh and Sidhu at loggerhead­s. Sidhu was made the state Congress chief earlier this year despite opposition by Singh. Sidhu and several Congress lawmakers in the state have targeted Singh for not fulfilling promises made in the 2017 manifesto, being soft on the Badals of the Akali Dal, and an over-reliance on a small group of bureaucrat­s.

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