The Asian Age

HDK sails through trust vote as BSY leads BJP walkout

Cong’s Ramesh elected Speaker without contest

- VINAY MADHAV

Karnataka chief minister H. D. Kumaraswam­y won a vote of confidence by voice vote on Friday after BJP staged a walkout in the Assembly before the floor test, in an unexciting end to the 10- day highvoltag­e political drama after the polls yielded a hung House.

Mr Kumaraswam­y’s motion seeking the confidence vote was declared passed by new Speaker K. R. Ramesh Kumar, a Congress MLA, who also got elected smoothly at the start of the day’s proceeding­s in the House after the BJP stood down from contesting the Speaker’s election.

Mr Kumaraswam­y described the BJP walkout before the trust vote as “escapism” while defending his party’s decision to take Congress’ support to form the government. He promised “a new kind” of coalition government that would become a model for the country and complete its full term of five years.

“I have not become chief minister today happily. I have pain. I had placed several issues in front of people during election feeling that they will trust me, but people of the state have not shown trust in me,” he said.

“I’m not running a majority government, but people have not given majority to any one... They may have given you ( BJP) 104, but it is not majority...,” Mr Kumaraswam­y added. Hitting out at the Opposition BJP, the chief minister said, “You ( BJP) may be feeling that this government will go in two or three months, it will not go in two months or one month, but will stay with stability for five years.”

HDK appealed to members of the Opposition to lay politics to rest and concentrat­e on developmen­t of the state and promised to also stop criticisin­g them. The CM also took a dig at Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who had tweeted that in Karnataka no party other than BJP could form the government, and also the new leader of the Opposition and former chief minister B. S. Yeddyurapp­a, who had said that he approached Opposition MLAs to ensure that the democratic institutio­ns were saved under PM Modi at the

Centre and himself in the state. Mr Kumaraswam­y wondered if the BJP held any contract for saving democracy in the country and reminded them that one of their ministers had spoken about changing the Constituti­on. The chief minister took on the BJP, which was his coalition partner during his last stint in power in 2006, with the old coalition partners sparring on the floor of the House, exchanging accusation­s and viciously running each other down. Mr Yeddyurapp­a warned the Congress to be careful of the “appa- maga”, the father- son party as he described the JD( S), recalling his 20- month associatio­n with it as “the biggest mistake of his life”. He warned that the father- son duo destroy everyone who helps them. Mr Yeddyurapp­a said that his fight would not be against the Congress, but the corrupt, power hungry father- son combinatio­n. He also used terms like “betrayers”, “cheats”, “frauds”, “destroyers” and many more words against Mr Deve Gowda and Mr Kumaraswam­y. He also said that Congress leaders would soon regret their decision to suspport the JD( S). Even before Mr Kumaraswam­y could reply to his allegation­s, Mr Yeddyurapp­a and BJP members staged a walk out in the House. Shortly before the start of the proceeding­s, BJP’s MLA Suresh Kumar said he was withdrawin­g his nomination following a direction from the BJP leadership. “On the directions of our party, I had filed the nomination for the post of Speaker. Now, after discussion in the party, it is felt that the Speaker has to be elected unanimousl­y following the parliament­ary traditions. I’m withdrawin­g my nomination,” Suresh Kumar tweeted. Mr Kumaraswam­y, earlier, dismissed the BJP’s argument that it was customary for the governor to invite the single largest party to form the government, noting that during the last one year, many government­s were formed in the country ignoring the single largest party. Even in neighbouri­ng Goa, the single largest party was the Congress, but the governor did not invite it to form the government, he pointed out. ” I should thank the Supreme Court, which asked Mr Yeddyurapp­a to prove his majority within a day. We don’t know what would have happened if more time was given,”’ HDK added in a jibe at the BJP’s sustained attempts to get Congress and JD( S) legislator­s to cross over. Reacting to the BJP’s counter allegation­s of “resort politics”, against the Congress and his party, Mr Kumaraswam­y recalled that both the saffron party and the JD( S)’ s legislator­s were also holed up in a resort when their coalition government was formed in 2006.

He also said the government was committed to waiving farm loans, as promised during the elections.

 ?? — PTI ?? Karnataka CM H. D. Kumaraswam­y, with other JD( S) and Congress leaders, waves to the media after his coalition government won the trust vote by voice vote at Vidhana Soudha in Bengaluru on Friday.
— PTI Karnataka CM H. D. Kumaraswam­y, with other JD( S) and Congress leaders, waves to the media after his coalition government won the trust vote by voice vote at Vidhana Soudha in Bengaluru on Friday.

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