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Gusagusa
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Username: Gusagusa

Post Number: 3918
Registered: 04-2012
Posted From: 37.228.104.70

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Posted on Tuesday, December 24, 2013 - 05:02 am:   Insert Quote Edit PostDelete PostPrint Post   Move Post (Moderator/Admin Only)Ban Poster IP (Moderator/Admin only)

As even the worst rivals scramble
to extend support to Aam Aadmi
Party (AAP) convener Arvind
Kejriwal in Delhi in the quaint hope
of partaking an iota of the
stupendous public goodwill that the
new entrant has earned in a mere
11 months of its existence; in
another power circle, it appears,
pillar-after-pillar is falling even
before the BJP's prime ministerial
candidate Narendra Modi has
erected the castle of his immense
political ambitions.
In a latest, Shiv Sena chief Uddhav
Thackeray has advised the Gujarat
chief minister to not be too
preachy about Maharashtra and
instead mind his own business - in
not exactly the same words and
yet in a tone no less acerbic.
At his mega rally in Mumbai on
Sunday which was attended by
over three lakh people, Modi had
hit out at the state's unstable
politics, saying, "In these years,
Gujarat had 14 Chief Ministers. But
in Maharashtra, 26 Chief Ministers
were elected. Now tell me, what
kind of politics would this state be
having?" {mosimage}
Responding to this, Thackeray
Junior - who recently got back his
mojo and came out of his iconic
late father's shadow by showing
vocal rivals in the party, including
veteran Shiv Sena leader Manohar
Joshi, their place at the party's
Dussehra rally - wrote in the
party's mouthpiece Saamna that
lakhs of Gujaratis choose to make
Maharashtra their home and that
many Maharashtrians are on the
Forbes list of the richest Indians.
In a curt one-liner which sounded
more like caution that advice,
Thackeray told the Gujarat chief
minister: "Don't worry about
Maharashtra."
Shiv Sena's equation with Modi has
been far from cordial. The party
was disappointed at not being
invited to Modi's rally at the
Bandra-Kurla Complex grounds on
Sunday. This was exacerbated with
the fact that Modi did not make
even a mention of Thackeray in his
speech.
Even though party president
Rajnath Singh showered lavish
praises on Sena founder Bal
Thackeray, Modi's silence on the
iconic leader piqued the Sena no
end.
Referring to the impressive crowd
at the rally venue, Modi had said:
"No one has had the fortune to
witness such large crowds in
Mumbai. There is a sea of
humanity as far as I can see."
According to political observers,
this comment was a dig at Sena,
whose public gatherings are usually
crowd-pullers.
Even when the BJP had announced
Modi as its PM nominee in
September, though Shiv Sena had
backed its ally's decision, it was not
without the party making it clear
that Modi was not its first choice.
Sena said it would have preferred
Sushma Swaraj.
Ever since the saffron party cleared
Modi's name to be the party's PM
nominee riding roughshod over
party veteran LK Advani's long-
standing PM ambitions, the party
had to witness its long-term crucial
allies frittering away.
Janata Dal (United) anticipated
Modi's rise as the party's PM
nominee and broke the 17-year-
old alliance with the saffron party
on June 16. In a press statement,
the JD(U) said: "It (the Goa
announcement of the chairmanship
of the electoral campaign
committee of the BJP) has not left
a shadow of doubt that this is a
mere ceremonial prelude to his
(Modi's) nomination as the PM
candidate. All efforts within the
BJP to suggest care and
moderation in the process were
smothered by the authoritarian cult
and imperious disdain."
Earlier, in its national council
meeting in April, the party called
for a candidate (to lead the
National Democratic Alliance) with
"acceptable high secular credentials
with no rough edges or divisive
characteristics".
Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar's
going away came as a shock for
the BJP since together the BJP and
JD(U) had emerged as an
unsurpassable force in the 2009
Lok Sabha polls. Of the 40 LS seats
here, in 2009, the JD(U) had
contested 25 seats and won 20,
while the BJP had won 12 of the
remaining 15.
More recently, the AIADMK
announced its decision to go it
alone in 2014 LS polls. Making its
chief J. Jayalalithaa's prime
ministerial ambitions clear, it was
resolved at a general meeting of
the party in Chennai that there
have been PMs from other states
like Uttar Pradesh, Punjab,
Gujarat, etc, and this is the time
when somebody from Tamil Nadu
must lead the country.
Jayalalithaa said a curt 'no' to the
recent overtures of Modi who met
her many times in the recent past
and she refused to enter into a
pre-poll truck with the saffron
party. Jayalalithaa knows she has
very strong poll prospects in the
state and wants to dictate terms
with whoever needs her support in
the post-poll scenario. With an
impressive number in the Lok
Sabha, she can easily lead a Third
Front to government formation.
Former PM Deve Gowda also
backed her claim to prime
ministership recently.
In August, the Rashtriya
Swayamsewak Sangh (RSS) made
it clear that it would tolerate no
criticism of Modi. RSS pointsperson
for BJP, Suresh Soni, who was
instrumental in getting Modi
appointed as campaign chief of the
BJP at the Goa national executive,
told RSS office-bearers in Lucknow
that the people of the country had
taken Modi to be their prime
minister and they were now duty-
bound to support him and bring
good governance back. The RSS
asked the BJP to act tough on
leaders who criticise Modi.
With Lok Sabha elections still a
good five months away and
political equations in the country
fast changing with curious
developments in Delhi heralding the
rise of an alternative politics while
many regional players exploring the
possibility of a Third Front, it
remains to be seen if Modi's being
at the helm of affairs helps the
BJP improve its tally in the LS or
lets important allies fritter away
thus resulting in the cumulative
loss of the party's prospects in the
Lok Sabha.

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