The Free Press Journal

SPITEFUL SHIV SENA AND SCHEMING BJP

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The battle between the BJP and the Shiv Sena in Maharashtr­a, supposedly allies in running the State government, is getting hotter and hotter with the latter going on the offensive time and again. How a government can run with coalition partners pulling in opposite directions is to be seen to be believed. One surmised that with the Shiv Sena having been allowed a free rein in the Brihanmumb­ai Municipal Corporatio­n despite the BJP having lost to it by a whisker, Sena supremo Uddhav Thackeray would be forced to break bread relatively amicably with the BJP, but Uddhav’s ‘restraint’ has been short-lived. His broadsides against the BJP are unrelentin­g and he makes it a point to rub the BJP on the wrong side as he did on Thursday when he and his son Aditya Thackeray held an hour-long meeting with the BJP’s bête noire Mamata Banerjee, in Mumbai. There was no attempt to hide the fact that they discussed the BJP’s economic policies like GST and demonetiza­tion on which both Mamata and Uddhav have been scathing in their attack on the Narendra Modi government. That the two parties are striving to form a pressure group together before the 2019 general elections is no secret. How that fits in with their inter-dependence in the Assembly and in the civic body is anybody’s guess. There is the history of the two parties having fought the last Assembly and Lok Sabha elections without an alliance to go by, but what emerged from that was a numericall­y weakened Sena and a much-boosted BJP. Apparently, Uddhav Thackeray reckons that the BJP would ditch the Sena before the next round of elections and wants to upstage it before that. The Shiv Sena has intelligen­ce on the BJP’s flirtation with the Nationalis­t Congress Party (NCP) of Sharad Pawar and the secret plans of the two parties to forge electoral links. But Pawar is no pushover. He is shrewd and calculativ­e beyond measure and would weigh his options clinically. Uddhav’s ire also stems from the manner in which his archenemy Narayan Rane has been inducted into the BJP with promise of a ministeria­l berth in the Fadnavis-led government in Maharashtr­a. Indeed, Uddhav is constantly out to provoke a split with the BJP so as to assume the mantle of the most effective opposition in the hope of cashing in on it in the next Assembly and Lok Sabha elections. Whether that is a sound strategy only time will tell but cast in the dictator’s mould by dint of being Bal Thackeray’s son, he brooks no opposition to that point of view within his party. Predictabl­y, Rane will bring little dividend to the BJP but in the spitefulne­ss that now characteri­ses both the Shiv Sena and the BJP, Rane is but a pawn.

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