The Asian Age

K’taka verdict hung: BJP largest party; Cong, JD- S seal deal; rivals stake claim

All eyes on Raj Bhavan as uncertaint­y looms Cong Lingayat gamble fails CM Sidda loses in one seat, 16 of his ministers defeated

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENTS

At the end of the counting of votes on Wednesday, Karnataka stared at a phase of political uncertaint­y with the May 12 Assembly polls throwing up a hung verdict, as none of the major political parties — BJP, Congress or JD( S) — was able to secure the magic number of 113 required to form a government, though the BJP emerged as the single largest party with 104 seats.

Neverthele­ss, a BJP delegation, led by its chief ministeria­l face B. S. Yeddyurapp­a, met governor Vajubhai Vala, a former BJP minister from Gujarat, on Tuesday evening, seeking a week to prove they had the numbers even as the Congress and Janata Dal ( Secular) cobbled together a coalition with former chief minister H. D. Kumaraswam­y of the JD( S) staking his claim to form the government with the support of the Congress.

Accompanyi­ng the JD( S) leader to Raj Bhavan were chief minister Siddaramai­ah — who lost in his native Chamundesh­wari by a massive margin, though he won in Badami — and Congress leaders Ghulam Nabi Azad and Dr G. P a r a m e s h w a r , KPCC president, who is tipped to become deputy chief minister if the Congress chooses to be in government rather than support it from the outside as was being speculated.

Past animositie­s and the bitterness of the poll campaign were forgotten as the Congress — which had to be content with 78 seats compared to the 122 it had in the previous Assembly — and the JD( S) finalised formalitie­s for government formation, a process which was initiated after polling day in Singapore where Mr Kumaraswam­y met some Congress emissaries. Sources said the Congress has deliberate­ly left the CM post to the JD( S) as it feels the mandate is not for the ruling party with as many as 16 ministers in the Siddaramai­ah government biting the dust.

The CM himself managed to barely scrape through in Badami by 1,696 votes, the second seat he fought from, but the massive blow to the Congress’ prospects in central and north Karnataka proved that the Lingayat gamble of offering the dominant community in Karnataka minority religion status had not worked

A BJP panel, led by its CM face B. S. Yeddyurapp­a, met governor Vajubhai Vala on Tuesday evening, seeking a week to prove they have the numbers

Cong is trying to come back to power through the backdoor and people of Karnataka will not tolerate it — B. S. Yeddyurapp­a

We have asked governor to give us an opportunit­y to form the govt with the support of Cong — H. D. Kumaraswam­y

at all. All eyes are now on governor Vajubhai Vala amid conflictin­g reports of horse- trading, with some reports suggesting that five Lingayat MLAs from the Congress are already missing. The BJP needs eight more MLAs to reach the 112 mark in the 222- seat Assembly, with polls yet to be held in two seats. Meanwhile, the JD( S) has reportedly whisked away its MLAs to a resort to make sure they are not poached upon by the BJP in its effort to scramble together a majority.

While the Congress and the JD( S) together have a comfortabl­e majority — 116, three more than the halfway mark — it remains to be seen how the BJP, despite being the largest party, will get its required numbers with only two Independen­ts winning the polls. “Wait and watch” was all that a top BJP source would say when asked how the party was planning to get the numbers. Any party or coalition staking claim to form

the government will also have to prove its majority on the floor of the Assembly, probably in a couple of weeks.

In fact, Karnataka has faced a similar situation in the past. In 2004, the Congress and JD( S) formed a coalition government led by late Dharam Singh after no party could secure a majority though the BJP emerged as the single largest party. That government lasted for two years and was toppled by Mr Kumaraswam­y, who led a JD( S)- BJP coalition government with the BJP’s B. S.

Yeddyurapp­a as his deputy. The 20- 20 month power- sharing arrangemen­t did not last long either, with H. D. Kumaraswam­y refusing to give up power to the BJP, which led to the collapse of the coalition in 2007.

 ?? — PTI ?? BJP leader B. S. Yeddyurapp­a ( left) arrives to address a press conference; outgoing CM Siddaramia­h with JD- S leader H. D. Kumaraswam­y on Tuesday.
— PTI BJP leader B. S. Yeddyurapp­a ( left) arrives to address a press conference; outgoing CM Siddaramia­h with JD- S leader H. D. Kumaraswam­y on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India