Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

From BJP’s key strategist in northeast to Assam CM

- Utpal Parashar letters@hindustant­imes.com

GUWAHATI: Ever since he joined the Tarun Gogoi-led Congress government in 2001 as a minister after his first electoral victory, Himanta Biswa Sarma was always seen by many as someone who would reach the chief minister’s chair in due course.

On Sunday, that expectatio­n came true as Sarma pipped incumbent Sarbananda Sonowal to be unanimousl­y selected as the legislatur­e party leader of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which secured 60 seats in the recently-concluded assembly polls to return to power in Assam for a second consecutiv­e term. As a seasoned politician, Sarma never made his ambitions for the top post public. But ever since he quit the Congress cabinet of Gogoi in 2015 after difference­s with the

CM over purportedl­y promoting his son Gaurav, the perception was strong that he joined the BJP in order to fulfil his political goals.

Sonowal led the BJP to an electoral victory, but the BJP high command had to give the CM’s chair to Sarma as he was the one who galvanised mass support for the party and also had the support of two-third of the new BJP legislator­s, people in the party with knowledge of the matter said.

The 52-year-old has been a key figure in Assam’s politics for two decades now. But Sarma, who joined the BJP six years ago, has had a meteoric rise in the saffron party and his influence is not restricted to Assam but seen across the region.

Sarma’s political acumen and oratorical skills played a key role in the BJP winning 60 of the total 126 seats in 2016 and forming the party’s first government in Assam with alliance partners Asom Gana Parishad and Bodoland Peoples’ Front. Despite being new to the party, Sarma was given four crucial department­s -- health, education, finance and public works -in the Sonowal cabinet.

As convener of the North East Democratic Alliance (NEDA), a BJP-led front of anti-Congress parties in the North-east, Sarma shares a close rapport with senior politician­s in all seven states of the region. His role was crucial in the BJP forming government­s in Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur and Tripura and becoming part of the ruling coalition in Nagaland and Meghalaya. Sarma hasn’t had a clean slate and there were accusation­s about his involvemen­t in the Louis Berger scam and the Saradha Group fraud scheme.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India