Deccan Chronicle

Will BJP topple Kamal Nath?

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In the midst of a coronaviru­s pandemic and an economic free-fall that will lose, due to Covid-19, another per cent of GDP growth (according to a former economic adviser to the Prime Minister) from an already anemic 4.5 per cent — some say even this is inflated — the government is focused on toppling the Madhya Pradesh Congress government led by chief minister Kamal Nath. The first step was to lure Jyotiradit­ya Scindia away with the promise of a government bungalow, expecting that the 22 MLAs loyal to him would leave the party and thus bring down its government. Six MLAs resigned and 16 are quarantine­d by BJP minders in Bengaluru. As the next step, governor Lalji Tandon on Saturday night — around 1 am Sunday, to be precise — asked Mr Nath to prove his majority on Monday itself. He was avowedly keen on upholding constituti­onal norms, not something BJP-appointed governors are famous for.

However, Kamal Nath is no amateur and Speaker N.P. Prajapati did what was expected of him — he postponed any trust vote till March 26, citing Covid-19 fears. This presumably gives the CM time to do some MLA management of his own; like coaxing rebels to stay in the fold. The BJP has approached the Supreme Court which, in keeping with its recent harmonious alignment with the government, said it would on Tuesday hear the BJP’s plea for a floor test within 12 hours.

Our Constituti­on is clear on the demarcatio­n of domain. The legislatur­e belongs to the people’s representa­tives and is run by the Speaker, not the governor. The courts can adjudicate on constituti­onally grey areas but here there are none. The governor would do well to remember that his post is merely that of a constituti­onal placeholde­r, as was eloquently elaborated over the weekend by Goa governor Satya Pal Malik.

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