The Asian Age

Fadnavis likely to take oath on Nov. 2 or 3 at Wankhede

- SONU SHRIVASTAV­A

Even as the Shiv Sena is mounting pressure on the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to share the chief minister’s post for twoand-a-half years each, the later has started preparatio­ns for chief minister Devendra Fadnavis’ swearing-in ceremony.

A senior party leader said on Saturday that Mr Fadnavis is likely to be sworn-in as the chief minister for his second term on November 2 or 3 at Wankhede Stadium.

The senior BJP leader said, “The swearing-in ceremony of the new government is likely to be completed by November 3. Meanwhile, the discussion over sharing of portfolios would be held with Shiv Sena president, Uddhav Thackeray.”

Interestin­gly, the BJP leader added that the party had earlier planned to hold the swearing ceremony at Mahalakshm­i Race Course if it had managed to get a majority on its own.

With the BJP short of 40 seats to form the government on its own, it has to take the Shiv Sena on board. The Amit Shah-led party won 105 seats, while its ally, the Shiv Sena, won 56 seats in the recently-concluded elections.

With the BJP registerin­g a below-par performanc­e, the Sena is reportedly playing hardball and batting for a 50-50 formula (rotational chief ministersh­ip and meatier portfolios).

“A team of senior state BJP leaders, including Sudhir Mungatiwar, Chandrakan­t Patil, will accompany Amit Shah to meet with the Sena chief after Diwali. However, only Mr Shah will speak with Mr Thackeray,” the BJP leader said on the condition of anonymity.

Meanwhile, the BJP has also called for a legislativ­e party meeting at the Vidhan Bhavan on October 30 to elect its leader in the new legislativ­e Assembly.

Mr Fadnavis would be elected the BJP legislativ­e party leader in the meeting before party observers sent by the Delhi leadership.

The BJP leader added that this will be a mere formality since PM Narendra Modi and the ■

party president had declared Mr Fadnavis as the BJP’s chief ministeria­l face during the polls.

Sources said that the BJP has been holding internal discussion­s to deter the Sena from being allocated the home, revenue and finance portfolios.

However, the Sena, sources said, is drafting its own charter of demands keeping in mind the portfolio distributi­on exercise undertaken in 1995.

In the first saffron government in Maharashtr­a, the BJP, then a junior alliance partner, had been allocated home, water resources, rural developmen­t, civil supplies, public health, transport, public works, finance and planning, but not revenue and urban developmen­t.

In the last BJP-led dispensati­on, chief minister Fadnavis had kept several important portfolios, such as the home department, with himself. However, a junior minister in the home department represents the Sena, Deepak Kesarkar.

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