The Sunday Guardian

BJP allies are looking for a larger share of seats ahead of 2019 polls

Many NDA partners have already deserted the alliance since formation of the government at the Centre after the 2014 Lok Sabha elections.

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ernment.

Trouble has started brewing in Assam where alliance partner Asom Gana Parishad ( AGP) campaigned against the BJP during the recently concluded panchayat elections despite being a part of NDA. The issue was discussed at the national office-bearers’ meeting in the national capital. Assam BJP president Ranjit Kumar Das briefed senior party leaders about the way AGP acted against the spirit of the alliance. The two parties have a strained relationsh­ip for some time now.

Shiv Sena, whose relationsh­ip with the BJP has been facing rough weather for quite some time, has sharpened its attack against the BJP.

“The BJP has been talking about a ‘Congress-free’ country. However, Congress president Rahul Gandhi has beaten them in their own turf. This is the defeat of ‘injustice and lies’. Pride has been restored and ego crushed,” said an editorial in Sena mouthpiece Saamana.

Sources said that the Shiv Sena is also mounting pressure on the BJP to hold the Assembly elections along with the general polls so that the BJP could not dump it as it had done after the last parliament­ary elections.

A shrinking NDA has become a matter of concern for the BJP and the party leadership is likely to address the issue now since the Assembly elections are over.

Many NDA partners have already deserted the alliance since formation of the government at the Centre after the 2014 Lok Sabha elections.

Haryana Janhit Congress was the first to leave the alliance, soon after the Lok Sabha elections in 2014. Telugu Desham Party (TDP) joined the NDA just before the elections, but left it early this year and joined hands with Con- gress. People’s Democratic Party ( PDP), too, joined hands with the BJP to form government in Jammu and Kashmir around three years ago, but the coalition broke this year.

Other parties which left the alliance include Swabhimani Paksha (Maharashtr­a), Hindustani Awam Morcha (Bihar) and Naga People’s Front (Nagaland), while Mizo National Front (MNF), which is all set to form government in Mizoram on its own after a landslide victory in the recently concluded elections, is also said to be maintainin­g a distance from NDA.

The BJP also has strained relationsh­ip with Suheldev Bharatiya Samaj Party, which has three MLAs in the Uttar Pradesh Assembly. Hence, the ruling party is mulling to bring in somemore partners into the NDA fold to strengthen the alliance before the parliament­ary elections early next year.

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