The Sunday Guardian

DKS, Siddaramai­ah, Kharge battle for tickets to loyalists

- R. JAYAPRAKAS­H

Three-way fights seem to be the order of the day in this election season in Karnataka. While it’s a triangular fight between the Bharatiya Janata Party, the Congress and the Janata Dal Secular, to get that magic number to form the government, it now seems that there is a similar triangular fight in the state Congress between the big three—aicc president Mallikarju­n Kharge, legislativ­e party president Siddaramai­ah, and KPCC president D.K. Shivakumar—to get tickets for their followers. Sources in the AICC told

that the Congress high command, which met the top leaders of the state in Delhi, gave approval for only 80 seats as most of them had single-name recommenda­tions. “Around seven sitting MLAS are being asked to sit out for reasons of antiincumb­ency and because of the age factor, among other reasons. A total of 185 seats were discussed and it was decided that 135 names with Assembly segments would be announced on 22 March after Rahul Gandhi’s maiden rally for this election in Belgaum. In around 50 to 60 seats, there are two or more aspirants for each constituen­cy. In the majority of them, the aspirants are backed by either DKS, Kharge or Siddaramai­ah which has further precipitat­ed the matter. It’s a game of one-upmanship, as each winning MLA will have his own weightage when choosing the CLP (Congress Legislativ­e Party) leader who will eventually go on to become the Chief Minister,” a source said.

The state Congress screening committee met over four consecutiv­e days last week on the outskirts of Bengaluru to finalize the candidates for 170 segments of the 224. “The screening committee was a divided house and the action then shifted to Delhi. The idea was to announce

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