Hindustan Times (East UP)

Ex-BJP MLA Lobo eyes hat-trick in Goa elections, this time with Cong

- Gerard de Souza gerard.desouza@htlive.com

CALANGUTE (GOA): Michael Lobo, a former minister in the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led Goa government, is eyeing a hattrick of wins from Calangute, a constituen­cy often regarded as the mainstay of tourism in the coastal state, which will go to polls on February 14.

However, unlike his previous two victories for the saffron party, this year Lobo is leading the fight for the Congress, which he joined along with his wife Delilah last month, saying the BJP was “no longer the same party”.

The party changed after the death of former chief minister and one of the tallest BJP leaders in the state, Manohar Parrikar, in 2019, he said. “It was no longer the party of the people and even the BJP karyakarta­s (functionar­ies) are unhappy. The BJP ceased to be a party of the people. Chief minister Pramod Sawant remained a rubber stamp CM, following the instructio­ns from those above him,” said Lobo, the former minister for port and waste management in the outgoing Sawant-led cabinet.

Despite the change of party and resigning from the 40-member Goa legislativ­e assembly, Lobo sounded confident of winning the election “with a bigger margin”.

“I consulted the people before taking this step (switching to the Congress). I don’t think there will be any change in attitude from the voters,” he said while campaignin­g in his home constituen­cy. It will become clear only on March 10 when the votes will be counted if he can indeed score a hat-trick on the state’s electoral pitch, but his meteoric rise from humble origins in Parra village to the assembly and subsequent­ly the cabinet has already made people take note of the 45-year-old leader.

Hailing from a family of potters, Lobo entered the beach shacks business in the 1990s when Calangute was being transforme­d into a major beach destinatio­n in north Goa. The popularity of this tourism hot spot was immortalis­ed by songstress Lorna Cordeiro, whose eponymous tune remains a popular Konkani song to this day.

Today, Lobo is one of the richest among the 301 contestant­s in the poll fray with assets worth upwards of ₹84.39 crore. His total assets nearly doubled from the ₹49.47 crore he was worth back in 2017, informatio­n gleaned from the affidavit submitted before the Election Commission revealed.

Calangute was a Congress stronghold until Lobo wrest the seat for the BJP in 2012. He defeated then incumbent Congress MLA Agnelo Fernandes by a margin of 1,869 votes after polling 9,891 votes. In 2017 assembly elections, Lobo increased his winning margin to 3,825 votes despite a visible anti-BJP wave in the state. He polled 11,136 votes against Congress’s Joseph Sequeira, who managed 7,311 votes. Having won the constituen­cy twice, Lobo is now eyeing the entire Bardez taluka comprising seven assembly constituen­cies. Besides lucrative coastal Calangute, the taluka also includes Siolim (which includes areas such as Anjuna and Vagator), Saligao and Mapusa, among others.

Bardez in north Goa and Salcete taluka with eight seats in south Goa district represent the two largest clusters of assembly seats. While Salcete has traditiona­lly been a Congress stronghold, Bardez has given mixed results. With Lobo on board, the Congress is hoping to wrest Bardez, considered crucial to form the government in the state.

While Lobo is generally accepted in these parts, he has made a few political challenger­s along the way. Joseph

and Anthony Menezes, two local politician­s who had helped Lobo win his first election in 2012, have since turned against him. Sequeira who was with the Congress until Lobo was part of the ruling party, has since joined the BJP and is now campaignin­g to defeat the former minister.

Sequeira, who has served as a sarpanch in the Calangute constituen­cy for many years now, said he will unseat Lobo.

“The kind of responses I am receiving suggest I am going to win the election. The people here have for long been waiting for basic necessitie­s like power, water and infrastruc­ture in the form of internal roads. People in general are unhappy with the way things have been for the last ten years and will vote for change,” Sequeira said. Another rival, Menezes, has joined the TMC, which is making a debut in state election, and hopes to damage Lobo’s prospects.

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Michael Lobo
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