Nationalist Congress Party leader Praful Patel said his
party is yet to decide who to support in the Gujarat Rajya Sabha election,
which comes as a blow to Congress leader Ahmed Patel.
AHMEDABAD: In
a precarious position when it comes to numbers that it needs to send senior
leader Ahmed Patel to Rajya Sabha, the Congress just got a solid piece of bad
news. Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) leader Praful Patel on Sunday said his
party has not decided yet about extending support to any party for the Rajya
Sabha polls in Gujarat to be held on Tuesday.
The Sharad Pawar-led party, which entered into an
alliance with the Congress for the 2012 Assembly polls in the state, currently
has two legislators - Kandhal Jadeja and Jayant Patel.
Gujarat has three seats to decide for the Rajya Sabha in
this election. BJP chief Amit Shah and union minister Smriti Irani are placed
to easily win two of the three seats. Ahmed Patel, who has served four terms
already in the Rajya Sabha, is getting pushed further away from the third.
"Though the NCP was part of the previous
Congress-led UPA (United Progressive Alliance) government at the Centre, there
is no such alliance at present. Though we are a small party with only two MLAs,
we have suddenly become important and people are now searching for these two
legislators," Praful Patel, the NCP in-charge for Gujarat, told reporters
in Anand.
He said the decision about supporting any party in the
Rajya Sabha polls would be taken in consultation with Mr Pawar.
Asked about the Congress shifting 43 legislators to
Bengaluru to stop them from defecting to the BJP, Mr Patel said the party
itself was responsible for the current scenario.
"Usually, Rajya Sabha MPs used to get elected
unopposed. It is just because of the Congress that a contest is taking place
this time. 14 of their MLAs have either left the party or have made up their
mind not to vote for the Congress candidate," he said.
Just days before the vote this week, six Congress
legislators quit the party within days last month - a plan allegedly scripted
by its former leader Shankersinh Vaghela, who, the party says, is out to draw
blood after he was not projected as its Chief Ministerial candidate. Even
though the NCP lawmakers have maintained they will go by what their party
decides, both had attended Mr Vaghela's huge rally on his birthday last month
where he announced his separation with the Congress.
Three of the legislators who quit promptly joined the
BJP. None will be eligible to vote in the Rajya Sabha election on August 8. But
their deletion from the Congress' rolls jeopardises the election of Ahmed Patel
- the political adviser to party No 1 Sonia Gandhi. A loss would also erode the
party's morale and expose new weaknesses ahead of the state election in
December.
To get re-elected, Ahmed Patel needs 45 votes on basis
of the current strength of the assembly. On paper, the Congress is down to 51
seats but some of them loyal to Mr Vaghela are likely to abstain or vote for
his opponent.
The BJP has fielded a relative of Mr Vaghela,
Balwantsinh Rajput, as its candidate against Mr Patel, just hours after it
acquired him from the Congress.
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