Hindustan Times (Patiala)

BJP clinches pre-dawn thrillers in Maha, Hry

- HT Correspond­ents letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) pulled off a pair of thrilling early-morning victories in Rajya Sabha elections in Maha- rashtra and Haryana on Saturday, striking a blow to the Opposition that was unable to keep its flock of legislator­s together and prevent cross-voting.

The BJP won three of the six seats in Maharashtr­a as its third candidate (after Piyush Goyal and Anil Bonde) Dhananjay Mahadik beat the Shiv Sena’s Sanjay Pawar in a cliffhange­r. The Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) won three seats – Nationalis­t Congress Party’s Praful Patel, Congress’s Imran Pratap- garhi and Shiv Sena’s Sanjay Raut – but it will be little consolatio­n after the embarrassi­ng loss of Pawar, who fell short after independen­t lawmakers switched to the BJP, cancellati­on of a vote due to alleged violation of rules, and inability of two jailed ministers to vote.

In Haryana, the BJP won one seat (Krishan Lal Panwar) and media executive Kartikeya Sharma, who was backed by the party, defeated Congress’s Ajay Maken by a razor-thin margin. The results are a blow for senior Congress leader Bhupinder Singh Hooda, who was unable to resolve difference­s with his rival Kuldeep Bishnoi, who crossvoted. Another Congress vote was disqualifi­ed, handing a narrow victory.

Voting for the Rajya Sabha elections finished at 4pm on Friday but counting was stalled in Maharashtr­a and Haryana over a web of allegation­s and counter-allegation­s of malpractic­e and bias. The Election Commission gave the go-ahead for counting only around 1am on Saturday.

In two other states, however, the results were announced on Friday. In Rajasthan, the Congress won three seats and the BJP one. Congress nominees Mukul Wasnik, Randeep Surjewala and

Pramod Tiwari won as did BJP’s Ghanshyam Tiwari. Tiwari defeated BJP-backed independen­t candidate Subhash Chandra.

In Karnataka, the BJP won three seats and the Congress one as the Janata Dal (Secular) drew a blank amid allegation­s of crossvotin­g. Union finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman, Kannada actor Jaggesh and MLC Lahar Singh Siroya – all from the BJP – were declared winners. Former Union minister Jairam Ramesh won from the Congress.

The results of the elections brought more embarrassm­ent for the Opposition, which was not able to match the BJP’s challenge in Maharashtr­a and Haryana. In both states, opposition parties had the numbers to get their nominees through but were done in by infighting, an inability to convince smaller parties and independen­ts to back them and cross-voting. It also means that the National Democratic Alliance (NDA), which is already close to a working majority in the Upper House, will have the upper hand for the remainder of its term on pushing through key items of its legislativ­e agenda. Rajya Sabha members are elected based on relative strengths of their parties in state assemblies. In this round of biennial elections, 57 seats were on offer and 41 were declared unconteste­d last week. Of the 16 that went to the polls on Friday, the BJP won eight, the Congress won five, its allies won two and an independen­t backed by BJP won one. This round of elections marked a victory for the BJP, which, purely on its own strength of lawmakers, should have won six seats but picked up an extra seat in Karnataka and Maharashtr­a each, and propelled Sharma to a victory in Haryana. The Congress won 10 seats.

The BJP’s strong performanc­es in assembly elections in recent years has buoyed its Upper House tally, which rose from 68 in 2018 to 95 before this round of biennial elections. The BJP effectivel­y maintains its tally of 95 (this includes Sharma). This, in addition to the party’s demonstrat­ed success at getting other parties to back it, will give it the edge in the presidenti­al elections in July.

The BJP raised the stakes in this round by fielding extra candidates in Maharashtr­a (three candidates when it had the numbers for two) and Karnataka (three candidates when it had the numbers for two) and backing independen­ts in Haryana and Rajasthan.

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