Business Standard

Changes on the cards

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What does a ruling party at the Centre do when difference­s among its members crop up at state level — dispatches differing leaders to the Centre. Recently, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) drafted B L Santhosh at the Centre when his interventi­ons in Karnataka became unbearable for Chief Minister B S Yediyurapp­a.

With J P Nadda taking over as president, organisati­onal changes have been announced, but are slow in coming. Now that the Rajya Sabha elections are over and more Covid-19-induced restrictio­ns are being lifted, there is talk that normal politics may return.

There is talk that extensive changes in the organisati­on and even the Union council of ministers might be in the offing. Nadda is likely to accommodat­e leaders from Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtr­a, West Bengal, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh and Tamil Nadu in the organisati­on and is learnt to have even sent a list to Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Given the difference­s between the Shiv Sena and the Congress in Maharashtr­a, the situation is ripe for a change in the coalition. The sticking point, of course, is who should be the chief minister. Devendra Fadnavis will lose face if he has to play second fiddle to (present Chief Minister) Uddhav Thackeray. One solution would be to pluck out Fadnavis from Maharashtr­a and plant him in Delhi.

Similarly, in Madhya Pradesh, the BJP government is at war with the party. Some drastic surgery and transplant­ation could help in stabilisin­g the situation.

The party is not short of options: There are organisati­onal as well as government vacancies that need to be filled. There is even talk that Home Minister Amit Shah could become India’s new defence minister. Expect some changes next month ahead of Parliament’s monsoon session, virtual or otherwise!

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