[The very essence of the current situation is that the BJP is out to
dismantle "secular" "democratic" "India", that had been brought into being
by the epic Indian freedom struggle, and supplant it with a "Hindu Rashtra"
- denuded of any vestiges of substantive democracy and pluralism.
The control over various levers of state power is too critical in this
project.

The Sena, or whoever, has no potential to accomplish anything comparable on
its own.

This sinister project needs be foiled.
It's, literally, a life-and-death issue, for too many Indians.

<<Fadnavis sought to take the blame on himself, claiming the decision to
align with Ajit Pawar and form the government was taken at the state level,
but no one was fooled.

For Fadnavis and Ajit to take oath at 7.50am on Saturday, the Prime
Minister had long before daybreak invoked Rule 12, reserved for
emergencies, to bypass cabinet approval for revocation of President’s rule
in Maharashtra.

The Rashtrapati Bhavan was informed and the President’s assent secured
while most Indians were still sleeping.

A gazette notification of the revocation, digitally signed by the Union
home secretary who reports to home minister Shah, was issued at 5.47am.

The swearing-in ceremony, which was announced after it was over, concluded
at 8.10am. Modi had tweeted his congratulations to Fadnavis and Ajit at
8.16am, followed soon after by Shah who is also the BJP president.>>

(Excerpted from sl. no. I. below.)

<<As the dust settles on the BJP’s failed tactics, the attention will shift
to the oddity that is a government headed by the Shiv Sena but featuring
ministers and support from the NCP and the Congress. Such alliances are not
unheard of in Indian politics. Indeed, in its early years the Shiv Sena was
sheltered by the Congress in an attempt to displace the Communist parties
that were then powerful in Mumbai.

Even so, the three parties and their power bases are not exactly
complementary and one can easily see the government falling into constant
bickering and infighting. No Thackeray has ever been in charge before
either, although having Uddhav Thackeray as chief minister might actually
help matters. Still, there is little clarity on what sort of government
this coalition will offer the people of Maharashtra.>>

(Excerpted from sl. no. II. below.)]

I/II.
https://www.telegraphindia.com/india/knocked-out-in-mumbai-bloody-noses-in-new-delhi-for-bjp/cid/1722324?fbclid=IwAR0q8RteMTFVfiwtUA146Mw4yrLOblHTDw9UDLBbrUNhhT0F1gWdhfj9UnI

Knocked out in Mumbai, bloody noses in New Delhi
The loss of face for Modi and Shah could have a deep impact in the days to
come

By J.P. Yadav in New Delhi
Published 27.11.19, 3:05 AMUpdated 27.11.19, 3:05 AM
3 mins read

Devendra Fadnavis addresses a press conference in Mumbai, Tuesday, November
26, 2019.
Devendra Fadnavis addresses a press conference in Mumbai, Tuesday, November
26, 2019.
(PTI)
Narendra Modi and Amit Shah were left with egg on their faces when Devendra
Fadnavis resigned on Tuesday afternoon, just three days after they had
burnt the midnight oil and invoked emergency rules to secretly install him
as chief minister of Maharashtra.

“After the Supreme Court set the date for the trust vote, Ajit Pawar came
and handed over his resignation, saying he cannot continue the alliance.
Since he resigned, we don’t have the numbers,” Fadnavis told a news
conference around 3.30pm, before going to hand in his resignation to the
governor.

Fadnavis declared he was resigning because the BJP had decided at the
outset that it would not poach any MLAs, not explaining why then they had
sought “additional time” from the Supreme Court to face the trust vote in
the hearing just hours earlier. The court declined, directing the chief
minister to prove his majority by 5pm on Wednesday.

The resignation letter was handed in Mumbai, but its impact was felt in New
Delhi where the setback to the BJP in Maharashtra is being viewed as the
biggest loss of face for the Modi-Shah duopoly just six months into a
stupendous general election victory that had led many to believe the
Opposition had been smothered.

Fadnavis sought to take the blame on himself, claiming the decision to
align with Ajit Pawar and form the government was taken at the state level,
but no one was fooled.

For Fadnavis and Ajit to take oath at 7.50am on Saturday, the Prime
Minister had long before daybreak invoked Rule 12, reserved for
emergencies, to bypass cabinet approval for revocation of President’s rule
in Maharashtra.

The Rashtrapati Bhavan was informed and the President’s assent secured
while most Indians were still sleeping.

A gazette notification of the revocation, digitally signed by the Union
home secretary who reports to home minister Shah, was issued at 5.47am.

The swearing-in ceremony, which was announced after it was over, concluded
at 8.10am. Modi had tweeted his congratulations to Fadnavis and Ajit at
8.16am, followed soon after by Shah who is also the BJP president.

BJP leaders in Delhi shied away from commenting in public, but privately
pointed out that Shah had been openly hailed as the “real Chanakya of
Indian politics” for the midnight operation installing Fadnavis as chief
minister. “How can the ‘Chanakya’ escape blame now?” one leader asked.

The loss of face for the Modi-Shah regime came on a day the country was
celebrating Constitution Day. To mark 70 years of the adoption of the
Constitution, a joint sitting of both Houses was held in the Central Hall
of Parliament, which most Opposition parties boycotted to protest the
“murder of democracy” by night in Maharashtra. The court ruling came just
as the sitting was to begin.

President Ram Nath Kovind and Prime Minister Modi delivered speeches,
underlining the importance of “constitutional morality”.

“While delivering his last speech in the Constituent Assembly on November
25, 1949, Dr Ambedkar had said that the success of the Constitution would
depend upon the conduct of the people of India and the political parties,”
President Kovind said. “In one of his speeches to the Constituent Assembly,
Dr Ambedkar while underlining the importance of ‘constitutional morality’
emphasised that the essence of ‘constitutional morality’ was to regard the
Constitution as supreme of any ideological differences,” Kovind added.

Immediately after this programme in Central Hall, Fadnavis called the duo.
A quick meeting between Modi, Shah and BJP working president J.P. Nadda
followed, in Parliament. A little later, news agency ANI — the only one
present at the swearing-in — flashed the news that Fadnavis would hold a
news conference at 3.30pm and news broke that Ajit had resigned.

Party insiders said Modi and Shah advised Fadnavis to quit without waiting
for the trust vote. In a similar situation in Karnataka, then chief
minister B.S. Yediyurappa had delivered a speech on the floor of the
Assembly and then resigned. Fadnavis was asked to avoid that.

The Maharashtra blow has left the BJP leadership shell-shocked. Apart from
losing the politically and economically crucial state, the loss of face for
Modi and Shah could have a deep impact in the days to come.

Although it is unlikely Modi and Shah would be questioned in the party,
given their total dominance, leaders suggested that this might change if
the BJP is defeated in the upcoming Jharkhand and Delhi elections.

After the Shiv Sena snapped ties with the BJP, party managers had hoped
they would earn the sympathy of Maharashtra’s voters and return with a big
majority whenever the Sena-NCP-Congress alliance government collapsed.

“Now we have lost the people’s sympathy too. We have exposed ourselves,”
one BJP leader said.

“The decision to ally with Ajit Pawar was the most foolish one. Our high
moral ground over corruption is gone,” another BJP leader said. “Ajit
smeared his corruption on our face and left. Can Fadnavis and even our
central leaders now go around Maharashtra and tell the people the NCP is a
‘Naturally Corrupt Party’?” this leader asked.

This phrase was coined by Modi in 2014 and has frequently been used by the
BJP in election rallies.

II.
https://scroll.in/article/944961/maharashtra-bjps-gambit-failed-but-how-long-will-unwieldy-shiv-sena-ncp-congress-alliance-last?fbclid=IwAR35zEV-dI0n4Vc1YAMRCKYNQsyOiFTHBkK-BxzJOl6BTOHCWc9rOxhSuQY

MAHARASHTRA DRAMA
Maharashtra: BJP’s gambit failed – but how long will unwieldy Shiv
Sena-NCP-Congress alliance last?
BJP lost face in Bihar and Karnataka, yet in both states it clawed its way
back to power.
Maharashtra: BJP’s gambit failed – but how long will unwieldy Shiv
Sena-NCP-Congress alliance last?

Shiv Sena leader Aaditya Thackeray along with party chief Uddhav Thackeray
and Nationalist Congress Party chief Sharad Pawar at a press conference on
Saturday. | Indranil Mukherjee / AFP

Yesterday · 05:49 pm

Rohan Venkataramakrishnan

The month-long saga of who will form a government in Maharashtra seems to
have ended on Tuesday. Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis of the Bharatiya
Janata Party resigned, just three days after he was sworn in before dawn on
Saturday. His announcement came hours after Deputy Chief Minister Ajit
Pawar, a renegade from the Nationalist Congress Party, stepped down.
Fadnavis held a press conference on Tuesday afternoon admitting that he did
not have the numbers to form a government in the 288-member house.

The tumultuous events occurred a month after the state election results
came on October 24, giving majority to the BJP and its alliance partner,
the Shiv Sena. However, the Sena decided that it was not getting a fair
deal from the BJP and broke away, leaving a genuinely hung assembly.

The numbers: BJP with 105 seats, Shiv Sena 56, the Nationalist Congress
Party 54 and Congress 44. The rest are held by smaller parties and
independents.

As the rift between the BJP and Sena seemed irreparable, an improbable
alliance began to be worked out between the Shiv Sena, the NCP and the
Congress. The resignations of Fadnavis and Pawar came after a week of
hectic activity, beginning with the Shiv Sena-Nationalist Congress
Party-Congress combine seeming to finally come to an agreement on Friday
about what sort of government they would run, despite appearing to hold
extremely different ideologies.

They then found themselves pre-empted by the BJP in the early hours of
Saturday, when the Governor revoked President’s rule and swore in Fadanvis,
who claimed to have sufficient support from the Nationalist Congress Party
under Ajit Pawar. That gambit failed.

Ajit Pawar’s uncle, Nationalist Congress Party founder Sharad Pawar,
marshaled his resources and sought support from the Shiv Sena to literally
round up his party’s Members of Legislative Assembly. Together, the three
parties held a “We are 162” event on Monday, insisting that they had
sufficient numbers to go past the 145-seat halfway mark in the Assembly.

Together, the Shiv Sena, NCP and Congress, if they have all their MLAs
(including a back-from-failed-rebellion Ajit Pawar) would have 154, not
counting others that might vote with them.


Devendra Fadnavis addresses a press conference to announce his resignation.
Credit: PTI

In between all of this was an intervention by the Supreme Court, which,
after hearings on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, ordered a floor test on
Wednesday – which will not be held since Fadnavis has relinquished his
position.

For a full recap of what happened over the weekend, read this. Here are a
few quick takeaways from this turn of events in India’s richest state:

BJP gambit fails again
The Bharatiya Janata Party has tried this before – in recent memory.

In Karnataka in 2018, BS Yeddyurappa, as leader of the single largest party
in the Assembly after elections, was quickly sworn in as chief minister,
with the Governor giving him two whole weeks to prove his majority on the
floor of the house. The Supreme Court intervened, saying he only had 48
hours to do so. This prompted Yeddyurappa to resign rather than lose the
vote.

In Maharashtra too, the governor – who is expected to act independently –
moved with alacrity to put Fadnavis in charge and gave him two weeks to
prove his majority. This time period is important because it is generally
seen as a way of providing enough leeway for the BJP to cajole or pressure
MLAs of other parties to come on board.

Yet, here again the Supreme Court intervened and ordered a floor test on a
much quicker deadline, albeit after the delay of two days. The BJP’s
gameplan failed. Of course, this is partly because Ajit Pawar was unable to
lure away a sufficient number of Nationalist Congress Party MLAs. But it
also reflects the failure of this strategy, which presumes that if the BJP
grabs hold of the chief ministerial seat, it can eventually manage the
numbers in the House.

Sharad Pawar’s victory
There is absolutely no doubt that Nationalist Congress Party founder Sharad
Pawar has pulled off a major win. Many have said that the turning point of
the elections was when he and his supporters flooded Mumbai in response to
what was seen as a political move to interrogate him by the Enforcement
Directorate in the middle of the campaign.

Pawar, a shrewd political actor who has generally been able to turn
situations to his advantage, ensured that the NCP did not fall apart,
despite the rebellion of his nephew – who has been unhappy about his role
in the party for some time now. He is also said to have been at the core of
negotiations between the Shiv Sena and the NCP-Congress, parties that would
normally be at each others throats.

It is not for no reason that many will characterise this as a victory for
Pawar over the BJP’s Amit Shah. As for Ajit Pawar, well, it remains to be
seen how his return to the NCP will play out.


Nationalist Congress Party leader Ajit Pawar in Mumbai on Sunday. Credit:
PTI

BJP loses moral authority
Had the BJP sat back and allowed the Shiv Sena to tie-up with ideologically
opposite parties like Congress and NCP, it could have gone to town about
unholy alliances and power-hungry leaders coming together simply to keeping
it out of power. Instead, it tried to pre-empt things by bringing on board
NCP’s Ajit Pawar, whom Fadnavis had promised to put in jail during the
campaign.

In other words, anything it might now accuse the Sena-NCP-Congress of doing
– tying up with ideological opponents, being hungry for power – it has just
attempted itself. While public memory may be short, especially if the new
alliance proves to be unwieldy, for the moment the BJP has no ammunition.

How will unwieldy coalition operate?
As the dust settles on the BJP’s failed tactics, the attention will shift
to the oddity that is a government headed by the Shiv Sena but featuring
ministers and support from the NCP and the Congress. Such alliances are not
unheard of in Indian politics. Indeed, in its early years the Shiv Sena was
sheltered by the Congress in an attempt to displace the Communist parties
that were then powerful in Mumbai.

Even so, the three parties and their power bases are not exactly
complementary and one can easily see the government falling into constant
bickering and infighting. No Thackeray has ever been in charge before
either, although having Uddhav Thackeray as chief minister might actually
help matters. Still, there is little clarity on what sort of government
this coalition will offer the people of Maharashtra.

Will BJP pull another Karnataka/Bihar?
One theory that went around when the Shiv Sena said it was splitting off
from the BJP over the question of its own candidate getting some time as
chief minister was this: the Sena will work with the other two parties for
two years, with its own chief minister, and then return to the BJP, which
was always a much more natural ally.

The experience of two other states is instructive here: in Bihar, the
Janata Dal (United) combined with the Rashtriya Janata Dal and the Congress
to form a government, only to split up and return to the BJP midway through
the term. In Karnataka, though the BJP had egg on its face after
Yeddyurappa’s failed attempt to take charge, it clawed its way back to
power, bringing enough Opposition MLAs over to its side within a year of
the election result.

The BJP, with 105 seats, is a strong Opposition party, one that will pounce
on every opportunity to provoke squabbles between the alliance partners and
draw support to its side. How long will the coalition last?

BJP’s middling state results
Here’s a very simple way of looking at the BJP’s results in state elections
over the last few years:

2017: Huge win in Uttar Pradesh
2017: Close win in Gujarat
2018: Single-largest party in Karnataka, can’t form government at first
2018: Loses in Chhattisgarh, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh
2019: Dented in Haryana, single-largest party in Maharashtra but can’t form
government

Of course, there was a huge Lok Sabha victory in the middle of those
results, but it is clear that the BJP has not been nearly as successful at
the state level as it has been at the Centre. Will this trend carry on? Up
next, in a matter of days are elections in Jharkhand.
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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