The Asian Age

Naidu meets Gowda, HDK; says 1996- type Opp. front emerging

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

Setting the pace for the formation of an Opposition front ahead of the 2019 Lok Sabha polls to take on the ruling BJP, Andhra Pradesh chief minister N. Chandrabab­u Naidu met JD( S) supremo and former Prime Minister H. D. Deve Gowda and his son H. D. Kumaraswam­y, the Karnataka chief minister, in Bengaluru on Thursday and gave enough hints that the Opposition experiment would be similar to the exercise carried out in 1996 when a United Front ( UF) government led by Mr Deve Gowda came to power in New Delhi with the support of the

We want to save the nation while you want some masala news — N. Chandrabab­u Naidu, Andhra CM

Congress. Mr Naidu, who broke away from the BJPled NDA a few months ago on the issue of a special package for his state, has been spearheadi­ng the campaign for a grand alliance of the Opposition. He, however, ducked a question on who the prime ministeria­l candidate of the united Opposition would be, quipping: “We want to save the nation while you want some masala news.”

When asked who would lead the coalition, Mr Naidu said this would be decided in due course. “We had a similar government in 1996 led by Mr Deve Gowda, with the Congress supporting it

from outside. The Congress is the main anchor ( of the alliance) and the BJP is our main rival. I spoke to Mayawati, Akhilesh Yadav and tomorrow I am meeting M. K. Stalin ( DMK chief). All of us will come together to save the country and save democracy,” he said, adding that West Bengal chief minister, Mamata Banerjee would be hosting a rally in January to firm up Opposition unity, followed by a farmers’ rally in Karnataka.

“All institutio­ns have been destroyed. The CBI has been finished. Now the RBI, an autonomous institutio­n, is under pressure. Media reports suggest the RBI governor wants to quit,” he said. He also attacked the NDA government over the income- tax and Enforcemen­t Directorat­e raids on Opposition leaders’ offices and houses.

When his attention was drawn to the BJP’s criticism of the Opposition mahagathba­ndhan, saying it would come a cropper, Mr Naidu referred to the Congress- JD( S) experiment in Karnataka that had swept the recent Lok Sabha and Assembly bypolls, winning four of five seats. “What happened in Karnataka reflects the mood of the nation,” he said, and recalled the bonhomie of 1996 when he was the convenor of the United Front and Mr Deve Gowda was chairman of the front. “We enjoy a good rapport. I came to seek his blessings and cooperatio­n which he agreed to extend,” the TDP chief said.

Asked whether the TDP would be dubbed opportunis­tic as it was a part of the NDA for four years before splitting away, Mr Naidu said: “We gave the BJP enough time but they did not implement a special package for Andhra or the provisions of the special act under which the new state was created.”

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