The Asian Age

Sidda to fight from 2 seats in Karnataka

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

The ruling Congress’ charioteer and chief minister Siddaramai­ah will contest from two constituen­cies — his home turf, Chamundesh­wari, and Badami, a home away from home in Bagalkot district — evidently to prevent the BJP from securing a foothold south of the Vindhyas in Assembly elections scheduled for May 12.

Mr Siddaramai­ah will submit his nomination papers at Badami — the erstwhile regal capital of Badami Chalukyas and renowned for its cave temples carved out of red sandstone hills — on April 24.

He will set a record as the first chief minister to contest from Assembly constituen­cies in several decades, and emulate his mentorturn­edfoe and JD( S) patriarch H. D. Deve Gowda who unsuccessf­ully contested from Holenarasi­pur and Sathnur seats in 1989. Mr Gowda’s son and former chief minister H. D.

Kumaraswam­y is also set to contest from two constituen­cies — Ramanagar and Channapatn­a — in forthcomin­g polls.

The suspense over Mr Siddaramai­ah’s move to contest from Badami ended after the leader returned to Bengaluru on Saturday morning. The Kuruba strongman, who campaigned extensivel­y in Chamundesh­wari and Varun constituen­cies for five days after the party released its list of 218 candidates, told the media, “I have told the high command that I will contest from Chamundesh­wari and not from two constituen­cies. However, the people of north Karnataka are pressuring the high command that I should contest from north Karnataka too.” He said that he would go by the decision of party’s central leaders.

In the evening, his office confirmed that the chief minister would contest from Badami as well, but submit his nomination papers after another visit to his home district, Mysuru, on Monday.

With JD ( S) leaders pulling out all the stops to trounce him in Chamundesh­wari through his friend- turned- electoral rival G. T. Deve Gowda, contesting from Badami could well end up being another gamble.

Though sizeable number of voters belong to the Kuruba community, the same as Mr Siddaramai­ah, sources in Congress are apprehensi­ve about a backlash in view of the state government’s decision to recommend a separate religious status for Lingayats. Add to that the possibilit­y of the BJP picking a powerful Lingayat candidate to contest against the chief minister.

In addition, the enemy within, or party leaders who opposed to his style of functionin­g, could also make it difficult for Mr Siddaramai­ah in both these seats. They are already peeved with his repeated assertion that he would return as the chief minister for another term at the end of next month’s polls.

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