The Asian Age

Naidu, Gandhi file V-P nomination papers

Venkaiah quits BJP, resigns as minister

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

The race for the vice-presidenti­al office kicked off on Tuesday with both the candidates — NDA nominee M. Venkaiah Naidu and Opposition nominee Gopalkrish­na Gandhi — filing their nomination papers in the company of their supporters. It was a show of strength that is tilted in Mr Naidu’s favour.

After filing their papers, the NDA’s nominee spoke of what a “painful” task it was to quit the BJP, while the Opposition’s nominee spoke of the “force which is dividing our country” and the dangers it poses.

Mr Naidu, who had been with the Sangh and the BJP since his school days, had got emotional on Monday at a meeting of the top party brass where the decision to nominate him for the post of VicePresid­ent was finalised. It was learnt that he broke down while recalling

how, having lost his mother at a young age, he was “brought up” by the party. Leaving the organisati­on was like getting separated from his mother again, he said.

The BJP is confident that Mr Naidu would touch base comfortabl­y as the numbers favour him.

Mr Naidu said the candidatur­e was an “honour” and he would uphold the dignity of the office if elected. For filing his nomination papers, Mr Naidu was accompanie­d by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, BJP president Amit Shah, veteran leaders L.K. Advani, Murli Manohar Joshi, NDA Cabinet ministers and non-NDA leaders.

The Opposition’s candidate, Mr Gopalkrish­na Gandhi, was accompanie­d by Congress president Sonia Gandhi, vice-president Rahul Gandhi, JD(U)’s Sharad Yadav, CPI(M)’s Sitaram Yechury, CPI’s D Raja, NCP’s Tariq Anwar and Praful Patel, NC’s Farooq Abdullah and DMK’s Kanimozhi for filing his nomination.

Speaking to the media, Mr Naidu said that he would “like to assure the people of the country that, on being elected, I will uphold the traditions and standards set by the worthy predecesso­rs.”

He reached out to parties across the political divide and said that he no longer belonged to the BJP and would strengthen democratic institutio­ns if elected. “I am above any party now,” Mr Naidu said, and added that he would continue as a member of the Rajya Sabha and cast his vote in the vice-presidenti­al poll next month.

Earlier, at a get-together to felicitate Mr Naidu, Mr Modi said in lighter vein that the Treasury benches in the Rajya Sabha, of which Mr Naidu will be chairman if elected, “will not let his blood pressure go up” and offer him their fullest cooperatio­n.

Mr Gopalkrish­na Gandhi, a strong and vocal opponent of the death penalty, defended his efforts to save Mumbai blast convict Yakub Memon from the gallows, saying that “capital punishment was medieval and wrong.” Facing criticism from the Shiv Sena for backing Memon’s mercy plea, Mr Gandhi said that his efforts were inspired by Mahatma Gandhi and Babasaheb Ambedkar, who were against the death penalty.

“In our country, we are living in times of division. A whole force which is dividing our country is in action mode and that spells danger,” the former West Bengal governor told reporters after filing his papers for the vice-presidenti­al poll.

To a question on the odds favouring Mr Naidu, he said, “Arithmetic is about numbers, philosophy is about principles. There cannot be anything better than numbers and principle, but sometimes one has to take such steps for principles which are not linked to numbers.”

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