Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Cong, JD(S) to have common minimum programme

- Vikram Gopal vikram.gopal@hindustant­imes.com

The coordinati­on committee of the Congress-Janata Dal (Secular) alliance government conducted its first meeting in the city on Thursday and decided to come up with a common minimum programme that would ensure the smooth functionin­g of the government.

The committee is headed by former chief minister Siddaramai­ah with deputy CM G Parameshwa­ra and All-India Congress Committee (AICC) general secretary in-charge of the state KC Venugopal as its members from Congress while chief minister HD Kumaraswam­y as well as JD(S)’s secretary general Danish Ali represent the regional party.

At the first meeting the committee decided to name a panel to draft the common minimum programme of the alliance to ensure smooth coordinati­on among the two parties in running the government.

Addressing the mediaperso­ns after the meeting, Siddaramai­ah said, “As this is a coalition government, it will be difficult to implement all the assurances made in the respective manifestos of the two parties, but these will be met over the course of the next 5 years.”

Siddaramai­ah said the drafting committee would have three Congress and two JD(S) members and the names of the members would be announced on Friday.

“Keeping in mind the manifestos of both the parties a draft programme will be chalked up within 10 days and will be placed before the coordinati­on committee, which will have to approve it,” he said.

The committee also decided to continue the flagship schemes of the previous Siddaramai­ah government, including the Anna Bhagya scheme for providing free rice to below the poverty line families.

However, the leaders refused to reveal the discussion­s on the issue of disgruntle­d MLAs on both sides.

On Thursday, former minister HK Patil met Venugopal to convey the dissension within the state unit of the party to the high command.

Ever since the cabinet of the coalition government was expanded last week, senior leaders of both the Congress and Janata Dal (Secular) have publicly aired their grievances at having lost out on ministeria­l berths.

After meeting Venugopal, Patil told media persons that he had been advised to meet party president Rahul Gandhi.

“Whenever he calls me for a meeting I will tell him about the minor problems that some of us have, as our intention is to strengthen the party,” he said. The unusually high concentrat­ion of particulat­e matter in the last few days in North India clearly shows that air pollution is not a seasonal problem anymore. As the climate gets warmer and frequency of rains reduces, such spurts in coarse particles making breathing difficult will become a new normal, unless government­s wake up to the alarm.

The Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change’s latest assessment says that planet can bear only up to a 1.5 to 2 degrees Celsius increase in temperatur­e from the pre-industrial era levels. The world had already wa- rmed by 0.9 degrees Celsius till 2015 and at the present pace of emissions, climate scientists say, the IPCC mark will get breached latest by 2050.

BENGALURU:

 ?? ARIJIT SEN/HT ?? Former Karnataka CM Siddaramai­ah (left) arrives for the first coordinati­on committee meeting in Bengaluru on Thursday.
ARIJIT SEN/HT Former Karnataka CM Siddaramai­ah (left) arrives for the first coordinati­on committee meeting in Bengaluru on Thursday.
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