The Sunday Guardian

SEARCH INTENSIFIE­S FOR NEXT PRESIDENT

- CONTINUED FROM P2

Territorie­s—Delhi and Pondicherr­y. The election takes place by the system of proportion­al representa­tion by the single transferra­ble vote as provided in Article 55(3) of the Constituti­on. The term of the President is for five years.

Mukherjee’s chances of being made a consensus candidate would depend upon the electoral arithmetic, post the outcome of the five Assembly polls in March. If the numbers stack up against the ruling dispensati­on, it would be glad to avoid an unnecessar­y confrontat­ion with its adversarie­s for the prestigiou­s election. Instead, it would settle down and get its nominee elected as the Vice President, since for this position, the Electoral College requires a simple majority amongst members in both Houses of Parliament collective­ly.

Sources stated that several names have been doing the rounds, though the issue remains in the realm of speculatio­n. A large section of the Sangh Parivar is in favour of veteran BJP leader Murali Manohar Joshi being elected as the President in view of his vast experience, immense knowledge, political acumen, wide acceptabil­ity and unquestion­ed seniority. Joshi, who was sidelined along with party’s patriarch L.K. Advani, Shanta Kumar and Yashwant Sinha, is a member of the Marg Darshak Mandal. He was first elected to the Lok Sabha in 1977, much earlier than most members of the Lower House. At one stage, Joshi was also seen as Prime Ministeria­l material, before the party decided to back Narendra Modi in 2013.

L.K. Advani is considered to be the man who is regarded as the architect of the BJP and played the most pivotal role in its expansion, particular­ly during his famous Somnath to Ayodhya Rath Yatra in the early 1990s. He could easily have been the Prime Minister had he not proposed Atal Behari Vajpayee’s name in the Mumbai BJP plenary session in 1995. Advani controlled the party and in the process clashed with the RSS leaders on several occasions. However, the majority of leaders whom he groomed seem to have deserted him and are conspicuou­sly reluctant to be seen in his company. Thus his being an automatic choice for the position is in doubt, though despite his advancing years, he is by God’s grace in good health.

Dr Karan Singh has been regarded by many as the best President India never had, keeping in view his scholarly dispositio­n and unmatched grasp of the country’s culture and ethos. Strangely, he was never considered by his own party for the post and, therefore, there is remote possibilit­y that the BJP would settle for his name, unless the RSS takes a decision to project the erstwhile Hindu Maharaja of a predominan­tly Muslim state of Jammu and Kashmir as the best bet internatio­nally. Singh was a founder of the Virat Hindu Samaj, a precursor to the Vishwa Hindu Parishad, and fell out with the Sangh Parivar when he declined to toe their line on contentiou­s issues.

M. Venkaiah Naidu is thought to be the least controvers­ial in the present Council of Ministers. He is BJP’s past president and enjoys cordial relations with all allies in general and the southern parties such as AIADMK, Telugu Desam and Telangana Rashtriya Samithi in particular, besides the Biju Janata Dal and the Trinamool Congress. Naidu is a beneficiar­y of the Prime Minister’s confidence and could therefore strongly emerge as a possible contender for the Presidents­hip.

C. Vidyasagar Rao, the present Maharashtr­a Governor may be considered a lightweigh­t by many of his colleagues, yet shares a tremendous rapport with the Prime Minister ever since he was Minister of State for Home Affairs in the Atal Behari Vajpayee government. His nomination would be subject to the BJP scoring emphatic wins in the Assembly elections, a probabilit­y which is being dismissed by the party’s critics. Najma Hepatullah, currently a Governor, is also a hopeful. According to knowledgea­ble functionar­ies in the party, Lok Sabha Speaker Sumitra Mahajan and Textiles Minister Smriti Irani could also be in the running. In addition, several lightweigh­ts too may feature in the long list of potential nominees if the BJP was to be in a comfortabl­e position to get its candidate elected.

It is virtually certain that Modi would play the crucial role in determinin­g the contender. Given his political astuteness and impeccable reading of the ground situation, he could even throw up a few surprises. The Prime Minister is aware on how Pramod Mahajan had staged a coup by introducin­g Dr A.P.J. Abdul Kalam’s name at the eleventh hour, when it was clear to everyone that an agreement on the then Vice President, Krishan Kant’s name had been finalised between Vajpayee’s principal secretary Brajesh Mishra and K. Natwar Singh, who had been entrusted with the task of negotiatin­g a deal by Sonia Gandhi.

Even as speculatio­n persists, BJP leaders, some at the instance of the top leadership, are exploring possibilit­ies of enlarging the support base of the National Democratic Alliance. Sources said that the NCP supremo Sharad Pawar was sounded out, but declined citing his deteriorat­ing health. If sources are to be believed, a party emissary acting at the behest of the BJP’s Central leadership, offered Deputy Prime Ministersh­ip and a key portfo- lio to Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, provided he agreed to terminate his alliance with the RJD and the Congress. Instead, he was conveyed that he should form the state government along with the BJP. Officially, the JD(U) and the BJP top brass have denied the developmen­t, but sources insist that nothing could be ruled out at present.

The BJP leadership is working towards getting the numbers in favour of the alliance in the Rajya Sabha. This could take place only if regional parties and their leaders were to come on board. The entire exercise is aimed at securing outright victory in the elections of the President and the Vice President, other than pushing important legislatio­n in Parliament to strengthen the hands of the Prime Minister.

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