Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Covid to floods: Bommai faces tall tasks in new role

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

BENGALURU: Karnataka chief minister Basvaraj Bommai has barely a year to go before the state goes into poll mode for 2023 elections, leaving him a very small window to deal with dissent, show progress and circumvent all challenges that have piled up over the last two years during the tenure of former chief minister BS Yediyurapp­a.

In reality, there has been over three years of non-performanc­e as politics trumped developmen­t or governance even in the HD Kumaraswam­y-led Janata Dal (Secular) or JD(S)-Congress coalition government.

According to analysts, Bommai has a huge task on his hands if he wants to be seen as a longterm bet for the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and not just an interim choice.

The chief minister is betting big on the Mekedatu balancing reservoir-cum-drinking water project that shows resilience and commitment not to back down against the threats of Tamil Nadu over Cauvery river water, which strokes emotions on both sides of the border.

“Tamil Nadu has always made a political capital of inter-state water dispute,” Bommai said on Thursday. The Tamil Nadu unit of the BJP have begun protests against the proposed Mekedatu project.

Bommai said that he will appraise the union leadership on the issue and will follow through to get the detailed project report approved.

The chief minister, who has served as water resources minister for five years since 2008, has been keen to get Karnataka’s long-pending irrigation projects back on track. In his very first visit to Delhi after taking office, he pursued the Centre to make all major irrigation projects including Mekedatu, Kalasa Banduri, Yethinahol­e, Upper Krishna and Upper Bhadra projects to be taken up as national projects.

Another challenge in front of Bommai is to tackle the Covid-19 pandemic which rearing its ugly head in the state again with neighbouri­ng Kerala and Maharashtr­a witnessing a surge in infections.

Yediyurapp­a had to deal with floods the very month he took over as chief minister but was lucky did not to face the Covid-19 pandemic problem then. However, Yediyurapp­a, however, had to tackle the two waves of the pandemic.

Other than this, Bommai has the additional burden of the floods, setting right the economy and containing dissent within the party after Wednesday’s cabinet formation.

A significan­t number of coreBJP legislator­s have been left out of a Cabinet which appears to be composed again only of those wanted by Yediyurapp­a, Hindustan Times reported on Wednesday. Supporters of Shrimant Patil, who was among the 17 who defected to the BJP in 2019, held protests in Kagwad on Thursday.

Several other seniors have been left out of the Cabinet and with just four vacancies remaining out of the total 34 portfolios, it remains to be seen how Bommai and the high command placate dissidents to ensure the saffron outfit comes back to power in 2023 on its own.

 ?? PTI ?? Karnataka chief minister Basavaraj Bommai during the oath taking ceremony at Raj Bhavan in Bengaluru on July 28.
PTI Karnataka chief minister Basavaraj Bommai during the oath taking ceremony at Raj Bhavan in Bengaluru on July 28.

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