While the BJP has insisted that Goa chief minister Manohar Parrikar is clearing files, though in AIIMS for treatment, reportedly for a serious pancreatic ailment, and the BJP-led coalition government in the state is stable, the Congress on Monday, September 17, moved to stake claim to form government.
Demanding that the BJP-led state government be dismissed, the Goa unit of Congress, which has 16 members in the 40-member state Assembly, submitted a memorandum to the Governor Mridula Sinha, urging her not to dissolve the Assembly and instead invite the Congress to form the government.
Leader of Opposition Chandrakant Kavlekar said that the state is not in a position to face another election within one-and-half year as that would mean stress on the state exchequer. “The party urged the governor not to consider dissolution of the state Legislative Assembly, which is a possibility considering internal fighting in the ruling alliance and illness of Parrikar,” Kavlekar told news agency Press Trust of India.
He claimed the Congress has support of legislators from other parties and can form the government. “We will prove our majority on the floor of the House,” he said.
“The government should be dismissed and we should be given an opportunity,” Kavlekar said, adding that his party delivered two letters, signed by all 16 of its MLAs at Goa’s Raj Bhawan, but were unable to meet the Governor. They will attempt to meet her again tomorrow, he said.
The governor is currently travelling and is expected to return tomorrow.
The Congress move comes after a BJP central team met former Goa party MLAs earlier today. After the meet, senior BJP leader Ram Lal said that the allies have reiterated their support to the BJP.
“Nothing is going to happen. The government is strong and has full majority. There are no problems between the government and the allies,” Ram Lal said as he left for the airport after concluding two days of meetings in Goa. “The alliance partners have said that the government needs to continue and that they are with the BJP,” he added.
“We have taken everyone’s opinion which would be shared with leaders in Delhi to take a decision,” Lal said.
Parrikar’s worsening health has subjected the BJP to attacks from the Congress which had won more seats but failed as it moved slow in stitching an alliance with enough numbers in the assembly.
The BJP managed support of smaller parties – the Goa Forward Party (GFP), the Maharashtrawadi Gomantak Party (MGP) and three independents – to form the government.
The BJP has 14 MLAs, the Congress which had won 17 now has 16 in the 40-member Goa assembly. A party or alliance needs 21 for majority.
The BJP along with its allies – the Goa Forward Party (three), the Maharashtrawadi Gomantak Party (three) and Independents (three) – has 23 MLAs but the alliance is seen as hinged around Manohar Parrikar, who was pulled out of his role as the country’s defence minister to head back to his state as chief minister last year. The Nationalist Congress Party has one MLA.
While all the BJP MLAs and coalition partner Maharashtrawadi Gomantak Party (MGP) have rooted for Parrikar continuing as Chief Minister, another alliance partner Goa Forward and three Independent MLAs had demanded a “permanent solution” to the ongoing leadership crisis, said a report in The Hindustan Times.
Ram Lal, who held several meetings on Monday, said, “All the allies have said they are with the government and will agree to the BJP’s decision. No one has placed a demand for change in leadership in front of me. The government is stable.”
Parrikar, 62, who is reported to be suffering from a pancreatic ailment, was admitted to the AIIMS on Saturday. He had undergone a three-month-long treatment in the United States earlier this year.
Some other ministers in his cabinet have also been keeping unwell. Urban Development Minister Francis D’Souza is currently undergoing treatment in New York and Power Minister Pandurang Madkaikar suffered a brainstroke a few months back.