Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

MVA in internal tiff over seat-sharing, Congress declares seven candidates

The Congress, Sena (UBT) and NCP held three meetings to settle their difference­s but failed

- Faisal Malik faisal.malik@htlive.com

MUMBAI: Opposition coalition Maharashtr­a Vikas Aghadi (MVA) is staring at a setback. Five days after the Lok Sabha elections were announced, the three parties are yet to resolve their difference­s over the sharing of 48 Lok Sabha seats in the state. The bone of contention is four seats—mumbai North West, Mumbai North East, Mumbai South Central and Sangli, which has led to friction between the Congress and Shiv Sena (UBT).

The Congress, Sena (UBT) and NCP (Sharadchan­dra Pawar) held three meetings on Thursday alone to settle their difference­s but failed to come to an agreement. In one of the meetings, Maharashtr­a Congress chief Nana Patole and

Sena (UBT) Rajya Sabha MP Sanjay Raut had a serious argument over the Sangli seat, insiders said.

While the Shiv Sena (UBT) has been insisting on contesting the seat, traditiona­lly a Congress constituen­cy, the Congress is unwilling to concede it. The rift between the two parties is likely to intensify, as hours after the argument, Sena (UBT) chief Uddhav Thackeray announced wrestler Chandrahar Patil’s name as their candidate from Sangli at a rally in the constituen­cy. This irked the Congress leadership in the state.

This is the second seat where Thackeray chose to unilateral­ly declare the name of a candidate even as discussion­s on seatsharin­g were ongoing between the three allies.

Previously, he announced Amol Kirtikar’s name as the Sena (UBT) candidate from Mumbai North West, which the Congress was seeking for its former MP Sanjay Nirupam.

Congress leaders have started questionin­g the benefit the party will get out of the alliance when it is not getting winnable and traditiona­l seats in the seatsharin­g pact. “It is a fact that the Shiv Sena (UBT) will not be able to win the seats without our help,” said a senior Congress functionar­y. “Despite this, they are using arm-twisting tactics and making it difficult for us. I am unable to understand why the party leadership has surrendere­d before them like this.”

The Thackeray camp, i n response, pointed out that it had conceded the Kolhapur seat to the Congress and would have to give up the Hatkananga­le seat to ally Raju Shetti and Ramtek to the Congress.

“With the Kolhapur and Hatkananga­le seats going to allies, we don’t have any seat in western Maharashtr­a except Maval, which is partly in Konkan. That’s why we are insisting on Sangli. We expect the Congress to understand our viewpoint,” said a senior Thackeray faction leader.

The unease in the Congress derives from the fact that it has sought only two of six seats in Mumbai—mumbai South Central and Mumbai North West— but the Sena (UBT) is unwilling to concede either one.

The party has offered any two from Mumbai North Central,

Mumbai North East and Mumbai North constituen­cies, insiders pointed out.

Meanwhile, the Congress announced its first list of seven candidates from Maharashtr­a. Chhatrapat­i Shahu Maharaj, descendant of Chhatrapat­i Shivaji, will contest from Kolhapur, while Ravindra Dhangekar will contest from Pune constituen­cy. Dhangekar had won the Kasba Peth assembly bypoll from the BJP’S bastion in a highvoltag­e election in March 2023. Three-term MLA Praniti Shinde, the daughter of former Congress chief minister Sushilkuma­r Shinde, will contest from Solapur constituen­cy while Gowaal, son of another loyalist K C Padavi, has been selected to fight from the traditiona­l Congress seat of Nandurbar.

Another veteran Vasantrao Chavan will fight from Nanded constituen­cy while Balwant Wankhede, sitting MLA from Daryapur constituen­cy, has been nominated to contest the Amravati seat.

The seventh candidate Dr Shivaji Kalge, is an ophthalmol­ogist who will contest from Latur constituen­cy.

It is a fact that the Shiv Sena (UBT) will not be able to win the seats without our help SENIOR CONGRESS FUNCTIONAR­Y

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