The Asian Age

Cong MLAs may be sent to resort to foil poaching

2 parties likely to target BJP MLAs

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

JD( S) state chief H. D. Kumaraswam­y and outgoing Congress CM Siddaramai­ah and possible deputy CM G. Parameshwa­r met late on Tuesday night to finalise the contours of the coalition dharma amid conflictin­g reports of poaching of MLAs and horse- trading.

There are reports that some Congress Lingayat MLAs — the community to which BJP mascot B. S. Yeddyurapp­a belongs — are missing, with speculatio­n rife that they may back Mr Yeddyurapp­a’s claim for the CM’s post. Meanwhile, the AICC has given the responsibi­lity of ensuring that the newly- elected legislator­s are not poached to party campaign committee chairman D. K. Shivakumar. The party has decided to hold the legislatur­e party meeting at the party office at 8 am on Wednesday, after which the newlyelect­ed MLAs would likely be taken to Eagleton Resorts on Wednesday.

As former Congress president Sonia Gandhi voluntaril­y extended unconditio­nal support to H. D. Kumaraswam­y, the leaders of both parties sat for a discussion on whether the coalition

government should have a deputy chief minister or not, and addressed the issue of portfolio allocation. However, the main discussion­s revolved around the legal recourse that the leaders should adopt if governor Vajubhai Vala did not invite the coalition partners to form the government.

To begin with, Congress leaders, aware of the bad blood between the JD( S) leader and the Congress CM, advised Mr Kumaraswam­y against continuing to hold any bitter feelings against the Congress. The Congress leaders cited the case of Mr Siddaramai­ah, who once was a bitter critic of the Congress and later on joined the Congress and became the chief minister. The leaders advised Mr Kumaraswam­y to forgive the bitterness created during

Sources said that instead of the BJP poaching their legislator­s, the Congress and JD( S) were in discussion­s on how to poach BJP legislator­s to end any hopes that the BJP had of forming the government.

the campaign and not hold Mr Siddaramai­ah’s vow in public rallies seriously, when he said: “I am taking a vow on his father, Mr Kumaraswam­y would not become the CM.”

Sources said that instead of the BJP poaching their legislator­s, the Congress and JD( S) were in discussion­s on how to poach BJP legislator­s to end any hopes that the BJP had of forming the government. “We will identify the weaklings and make them resign from the BJP,” sources quoted one of these leaders as saying.

Emerging out of the meeting, former CM Siddaramai­ah squashed all speculatio­n that five of their winning candidates, all Lingayats said to be upset over BJP chief B. S. Yeddyurapp­a being denied a chance to become chief minister, were planning to jump ship and join the BJP. “This is far from the truth, it is fiction,” Mr Siddaramai­ah said, adding that the Congress was fully backing Mr Kumaraswam­y for chief minister.

Standing next to each other in a clear show of unity, he also said both the Congress and the JD( S) would meet separately on Tuesday night and pass resolution­s to install a JD( S)- led government in the state. After this, the resolution­s passed by the two parties would be handed over to the governor.

The governor will once again be requested to follow the recent Supreme Court ruling which said that the single largest party need not be invited to form the government if a coalition of parties had crossed the halfway mark.

Mr Kumaraswam­y spoke to reporters and said both the parties would meet the governor and ask him to invite them to form the government. When asked how he had joined hands with the Congress after saying his party would not join hands with the two national parties and when he was reminded of the bitter criticism made by Mr Siddaramai­ah, Mr Kumaraswam­y downplayed the bitter exchanges, saying “let bygones be bygones... it is all part of the election campaign”.

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