The Sunday Guardian

No increase in Assembly seats, PM Modi tells Naidu and KCR

BJP leaders are resisting the demand as it would only serve the interests of the ruling TRS and TDP.

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi has made it clear to the two Chief Ministers—N. Chandrabab­u Naidu (Andhra Pradesh) and K. Chandrasek­har Rao (Telangana)– that increasing the number of Assembly seats of their states might not be possible before the 2019 general elections.

The PM was told by BJP president Amit Shah and BJP leaders from Telangana that increasing the seats would only serve the interests of the ruling TRS. Both the TDP in AP and TRS in Telangana have admitted a large number of Opposition MLAs in the last three years by promising them tickets in the next elections. However, those who lost the polls on the ruling party tickets were assured that they would be accommodat­ed in the proposed new Assembly seats as MLAs.

The increase in seats of MLAs from 119 to 153 in Telangana and 175 to 225 in Andhra Pradesh has been promised in the Andhra Pradesh Reorganiza­tion Act, 2014, which split the combined state three years ago. However, there is a loophole in Section 21 of the Act, which says that the delimitati­on of Assembly seats would be in tune with the provision of the Constituti­on.

Article 170 of the Constituti­on stipulates that the delimitati­on of both Assemblies and Parliament seats would be carried out only based on census data after 2026. That means delimitati­on can happen only after the census of 2031 and would be applicable to the elections that come after that. The delimitati­on exercise is expected to take at least six months.

The PM, of course, does not intend to delay the delimitati­on of Assembly seats in AP and Telangana thus far, TRS parliament­ary party leader AP Jitender Reddy told The Sunday Guardian on phone. The TRS delegation led by the CM recently urged Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh to introduce a Bill in the ongoing monsoon session of Parliament to increase the seats.

In fact, senior MPs from both TRS and TDP have been lobbying hard with Union ministers Rajnath Singh (Home) and Arun Jaitley (Finance) for the last one year to persuade the BJP to introduce a constituti­onal amendment Bill for increasing Assembly seats. The Centre has almost readied a draft Bill for the purpose.

When AP Chief Minister Chandrabab­u Naidu called on Rajnath Singh in Delhi on 25 July, it was conveyed to him that the government was ready to table the Bill in the House, once a decision was taken at the PM’s level. The same was conveyed to KCR by Rajnath Singh early this week in Delhi. KCR did not press the issue when he called on the PM later. The PM is understood to have said that delimitati­on of Assembly seats might not happen in the ongoing monsoon session.

Then KCR merely urged the PM to see if the Bill can be introduced in the next winter session of Parliament and also made it clear that he was not overly concerned with the seats hike issue. Senior BJP ministers at the Centre had told KCR and Naidu that the recent opposition from Congress to the increase in Assembly seats, too, would complicate things for the government in securing passage of a constituti­onal amendment Bill in Rajya Sabha. YSR Congress president Jagan, who has backed BJP in the President and Vice-President polls, too, has been opposing the hike in seats, sources said.

The PM’s stand has made both Naidu and KCR to huddle with their leaders and discuss ways to accommodat­e the defected MLAs and the defeated candidates in the existing seats. The TDP had admitted that around 22 MLAs from the YSR Congress and the TRS had admitted around 25 MLAs from other parties.

The BJP’s state unit is happy with the developmen­t. BJP’s Telangana unit president K. Lakshman said: “When there are many pressing issues before the government­s in the wake of division of the combined state, the CMs are after a hike in seats only for political purposes.”

Eviction of non-boarders from the campus hostels in Osmania University (OU) and Kakatiya University (KU) has become a challenge to the K. Chandrasek­har Rao-led TRS government in Telangana. These two universiti­es, which account for a large number of non- boarders, were in the forefront of a separate statehood agitation, whichcatap­ulted KCR to political power three years ago.

The eviction drive taken at the highest level in the government has become a political issue as thousands of students affiliated to different unions and political parties have been resisting the attempt for the past two months.

Though the issue seems to be limited to university campuses, its impact surely is bigger. Major Opposition parties and splinter groups of the Left have set up tents on campus and have been organising protests that are being joined by legal boarders, too.

Sources said that the Chief Minister had received reports from the intelligen­ce wing of the police that some students’ outfits were in touch with Opposition parties to work against the ruling TRS for the elections scheduled in 2019.

 ??  ?? K. Chandrasek­har Rao
K. Chandrasek­har Rao
 ??  ?? N. Chandrabab­u Naidu
N. Chandrabab­u Naidu

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