Maharashtra’s new political equations: Toying with their own T-20 formula?

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Mumbai:

With imposition of President’s Rule in effect from November 12, Maharashtra politics shifted from high-tension to a relaxed mode and the main contenders for government formation breathed easy.

The Nationalist Congress Party (NCP), Congress and Shiv Sena – who seem to be all set to cobble up the “MahaShivAghadi” alliance – are currently engaged in formal-informal talks at various levels with their respective shopping lists of demands.

The crux of the new partnership would be, of course, the coveted post of Chief Minister, a tug-of-war on which saw the pre-poll alliance of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) – Shiv Sena collapse on Monday as the BJP looked on silently.

In the new scenario that is unfolding now, an initial formula discussed was Shiv Sena and NCP would share the post of Chief Minister for 30 months each with Congress keeping the Deputy Chief Minister post for the full tenure of 60 months (five years), sources in various parties revealed.

Then a new formula was floated from the Congress side – the three parties sharing the Chief Minister’s term for 20 months each and also rotating the Deputy Chief Minister for a similar period by all parties. However, Sena President Uddhav Thackeray – who discarded his trademark kurtas for a set of formal shirt and trousers – angrily showed his fangs and rejected it outright,

A party source said it was the Sena demand with the BJP, which did not budge on sharing the Chief Minister’s post for 30 months, so there was no question of settling for a term of 20 months — “How shall we face our legislators and supporters?” Another counter suggestion was to give Sena 30 months, while the NCP-Congress could share it for 15 months each and also divide the post of Deputy Chief Minister among themselves.

Presently, the master strategists Congress’ Ahmed Patel and NCP President Sharad Pawar are currently giving finishing touches to the final pot of goodies from which all the parties would sup for the next five years. Another issue is the Common Minimum Programme (CMP) among the three parties for which Patel, Pawar and other leaders are poring over the manifestos of the three parties to pick out the agreeable issues and weeding out the contentious ones.

These would include the obvious agreeable issues like — complete waiver of farm loans, reviewing the implementation of the crop insurance and related schemes, boosting the agricultural produce market commodities and other issues.

The contentious issues could well be — five per cent reservations for the Muslim communities which was nixed by the former BJP regime, Shiv Sena’s demand for conferring a Bharat Ratna on Vinayak Damodar ‘Veer’ Savarkar, soften its ‘Hindutva’ agenda to ensure the new alliance does not get a saffron tinge, adopt a more inclusive approach towards all non-Maharashtrians, particularly north-Indians, minorities, etc.

It may be recalled that when the outgoing Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis had implemented reservations in education and government jobs for the Marathas, all state parties including the Opposition Congress-NCP had whole heartedly supported the historic move.

Some Congress-NCP leaders have privately lauded Thackeray’s decision earlier this week to politely show door to Hindutva leader and Shiv Pratisthan Hindustan leader Sambhaji Bhide ‘Guruji’ who was hoping to win over the Sena back to the BJP fold, and his decision to withdraw the party’s sole nominee, Heavy Industries Minister Arvind Sawant from the union cabinet.

A section of Congress-NCP is confident that despite all the vexed issues that may confront the potential alliance with Sena, things would be amicably sorted out as “Pawar hai to mumkin hai”. A worried BJP which Thackeray revealed is still wooing its former ally, has now deployed the Sena’s dreaded bogey-man and former Chief Minister Narayan Rane, to help it (BJP) muster the magical 145 simple majority figure in the 288-member assembly.

Leaders on all sides of the political spectrum have warned that this time, it will be near-impossible to engineer defections or indulge in horse-trading by or from any parties as the potential defectors’ could face the prospect of finishing their long-term political careers at the altar of short-term pecuniary gains.

In the meantime, the state awaits the dawn of a new era of coalition politics with the 134-year old Congress and 20-year old NCP planning to hug their bitter opponent, the 53-year old Sena, barely three days before the seventh death anniversary of its founder, the late Balasaheb Thackeray which falls on November 17.                IANS

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