The Free Press Journal

Civic poll results show community trusts BJP: Minister

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A senior Maharashtr­a Minister has expressed the hope that the ongoing agitation by the Marathas for reservatio­n will be withdrawn in the next few days as the BJP government is working towards resolving the issue and the community has reposed trust in it.

The comments by Finance Minister Sudhir Mungantiwa­r came in the wake of Maratha outfits announcing a fresh round of agitation from August 9.

He said the BJP's resounding victory in the elections to the Sangli and Jalgaon municipal corporatio­ns will give the party an upper-hand in dealing with the quota issue.

Speaking to select mediaperso­ns here over the weekend, Mungantiwa­r said the two cities have a large population of Marathas and the BJP's victory shows the community has faith in the partyled government in the state.

The BJP leader said the Devendra Fadnavis government is very clear in its intention to provide reservatio­n to the Marathas and accused "some people" of "instigatin­g" the community which is agitating over the quota demand.

The saffron outfit swept the polls for the two civic bodies on Friday. The BJP defeated the Congress-NCP combine in Sangli, while it trounced the Shiv Sena, its ally at the state and national level, in Jalgaon, North Maharashtr­a.

Mungantiwa­r said the longpendin­g quota issue could have been resolved when the Congress-NCP alliance was in power for 15 years (19992014). "The recent victories in the civic polls will give an upper-hand to the BJP on the issue of Maratha reservatio­n, because in Sangli (where the BJP posted victory for the first time), the majority of the local population are Marathas. This shows their trust in us," he said.

"We expect the discussion­s (between the government

and Maratha community representa­tives) to get over soon and hope the agitation will be called off before August 9.

Maratha groups have planned a fresh round of agitation in support of their demand for reservatio­n in government jobs and education.

Their stir took a violent turn last month and about half a dozen community members have committed suicide in support of the quota demand.

Attacking the Congress and the NCP, Mungantiwa­r said two main opposition parties tried to use the agitation against the BJP government for their own political end.

"They knew that despite being in power for 15 years, they had nothing to show to voters in the 2019 polls. So they were left with just two options - break the BJP-Sena alliance and divide votes or instigate such protests," he said. Mungantiwa­r claimed that during the all-party meeting called last week to arrive at a consensus on the issue of Maratha reservatio­n, NCP leaders Chhagan Bhujbal and Ajit Pawar took a divergent stand.

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