Hindustan Times (East UP)

Rumblings grow within BJP over CM face in state

- Utpal Parashar letters@hindustant­imes.com

IMPHAL: With voting for the Manipur assembly elections just days away, rumblings within the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) over its chief ministeria­l face have grown louder.

The BJP high-command’s decision to not announce a CM face before the elections has led to speculatio­ns in Imphal that the party might repeat its move in Assam last year and replace incumbent N Biren Singh with someone else after the results.

In May last year, despite returning to power in Assam for a second consecutiv­e term, the BJP leadership replaced incumbent Sarbananda Sonowal with senior minister Himanta Biswa Sarma as the CM. Sonowal was subsequent­ly moved to Delhi and accommodat­ed in the Narendra

Modi Cabinet. He is currently the Union minister for ports, shipping and waterways and also heads the Ayush ministry.

Polling for the 60-member Manipur legislativ­e assembly will be held in two phases on February 28 and March 5. The votes will be counted on March 10.

“I have nothing to say in the matter. It is for the party leadership to decide (whom they want to place in the CM’s chair),” Biren Singh had stated in an interview with HT last month.

Biren, who switched over to the BJP from the Congress just months before the 2017 assembly elections, has not had a smooth run in the last five years as the chief minister.

Presiding over a coalition government in the northeaste­rn state, according to a party functionar­y speaking on condition of anonymity, most of Singh’s time was spent on getting MLAs from the opposition Congress to join the BJP and fending off dissidence from within the party and its allies.

In 2017, the BJP won 21 seats, seven fewer than the Congress, which emerged as the singlelarg­est party but fell short of a simple majority in the 60-member House. The BJP, however, formed the government with the support of smaller parties such as the National People’s Party (NPP) and the Naga Peoples’ Front (NPF) among others. Soon, several legislator­s from the Congress also joined the BJP.

Ahead of the assembly polls, the BJP has 28 MLAs while the Congress is reduced to 13. Nine seats are currently vacant due to resignatio­ns and disqualifi­cation of MLAs. To keep the flock intact, the BJP has named 11 former Congress MLAs, who jumped ship after 2017, in the poll fray this year.

The decision has upset several party ticket hopefuls like Ksh Biren Singh, former chief secretary O Nabakishor­e and former director general of police (DGP) LM Khaute, all of whom joined the Janata Dal (United). Another popular name Nishikant Sapam, who failed to get a BJP ticket, is contesting as an Independen­t.

Though Biren’s role was instrument­al in holding the BJPled government in Manipur together, many feel that role might not be required if the party wins a majority this time.

“Biren was needed in 2017 as he had got contacts within Congress and helped the state’s first BJP government complete the five years, despite some hiccups. If the party gets a majority on its own, he might not be needed to take up the same role,” said a Rastriya Swayamsewa­k Sangh (RSS) functionar­y on condition of anonymity.

One of the main contenders to replace Biren is his second in-command in the state cabinet, Th Biswaji. Another name doing the rounds as a possible replacemen­t for Biren is Govindas Konthoujam, the former Manipur Congress president who joined the BJP recently. A party functionar­y said Konthoujam could win the race if choosing between Biren and Biswajit gets messy.

IN MAY LAST YEAR, THE BJP LEADERSHIP REPLACED INCUMBENT SARBANANDA SONOWAL WITH HIMANTA BISWA SARMA IN ASSAM

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