Can make way for Dalit CM if party says: Sidda
BENGALURU: Karnataka chief minister Siddaramaiah said on Sunday he would not have a problem if the Congress decides to make a Dalit the state’s next chief minister.
His comments came a day after the state voted for a new assembly, the result of which will be declared on Tuesday, and exit polls predicted a fractured mandate that might propel the Janata Dal (Secular) to play the kingmaker’s role.
“If the high command decides to make a Dalit the chief minister, I will give it the go ahead. But MLAs also have to give opinions,” Siddaramaiah said in Mysuru after telling reporters earlier in the day that “this will be my last election”.
Exit polls predicted a hung assembly after Saturday’s vote, triggering speculation Siddaramaiah might have to make way for a new leader if the Congress strikes an alliance with the JD(S) to retain power.
But Siddaramaiah — the first Karnataka chief minister to complete a full term in three decades — dismissed the exit polls, saying these are “entertainment”.
He is confident of the Congress getting a majority.
“So, Dear party workers, supporters & well wishers, don’t worry about exit polls. Relax & enjoy your weekend. We are coming back (sic),” he said in a tweet.
The Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) chief-ministerial candidate BS Yeddyurappa, too, dismissed the exit polls and insisted that his party would get 125 to 130 seats — more than the magic number of 113 seats in the 224member assembly to rule the state.
“The Congress won’t go past 70 seats, with the JD(S) getting 24 to 25. My calculations have never gone wrong,” the former chief minister said in Bengaluru.
Before voting closed on Saturday, Yeddyurappa announced that he was confident of victory and had decided that he would take oath as chief minister on May 17.
But all eyes are on the JD (Secular) of former prime minister HD Deve Gowda, give the predictions of a hung assembly in the state.
JD(S) chief ministerial candidate HD Kumaraswamy has gone to Singapore, and the reason for his travel could not be ascertained.
JD(S) national general secretary Danish Ali said neither Siddaramaiah nor Yeddyurappa will become chief minister even as he rejected the exit polls, many of which have predicted that the party will emerge as the kingmaker in a hung assembly.
“Siddaramaiah and Yeddyurappa are going to swallow their words in the afternoon of May 15 … People of Karnataka want to see HD Kumaraswamy as chief minister,” Ali is quoted as saying by news agency ANI.
Speculation about Siddaramaiah stepping down for a Dalit leader stems from an incident in 2013.
That year, two senior Dalit leaders of the Congress, Mallikarjun Kharge and state party president G Parameshwara, had contested for the chief minister’s post in a secret ballot of the Congress legislature party.
They didn’t make the cut as the majority of Congress legislators chose Siddaramaiah.
The chief minister dismissed the possibility of a similar scenario this time around.
“I hope I will be chief minister,” he said, underscoring his wish to remain at the helm despite saying he will be “fine with a Dalit CM” if the party chooses one.