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BJP’s Maharastra plan unravels after Ajit Pawar throws in the towel
The fall of the four-day-old government came hours after the Supreme Court ordered a floor test by 5pm on Wednesday, and paved the way for an Opposition coalition of the Shiv Sena, NCP and Congress — the Maharashtra Vikas Aghadi — stake claim to power.
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The
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led government in Maharashtra collapsed on Tuesday
as chief minister Devendra Fadnavis admitted his administration didn’t command
a majority and resigned, capping 80 dramatic hours in which dissident
Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) leader Ajit Pawar broke ranks and took oath as
deputy CM, only to find himself unable to muster the required support.
The fall of the four-day-old government
came hours after the Supreme Court ordered a floor test by 5pm on Wednesday,
and paved the way for an Opposition coalition of the Shiv Sena, NCP and
Congress — the Maharashtra Vikas Aghadi — stake claim to power.
“I want to thank Sonia ji and others...
parties with different ideologies have come together... those who were friends
for 30 years, did not trust us. But those against whom we fought for 30 years
have trusted me,” said Sena chief Uddhav Thackeray, soon after being chosen as
the leader of the three-party alliance.
He was flanked by NCP chief Sharad Pawar
and Congress state chief Balasaheb Thorat, who was elected as the party’s
legislative chief.
Pawar said the government will be sworn in
on November 28 at 6.40pm in Shivaji Park as party workers outside shouted
slogans hailing him as the only “tiger” in Maharashtra.
“It would have been great had Balasaheb
Thackeray been alive today. We shared great love. We criticised each other a
lot, but we never let go off the personal warmth,” he said.
Representatives from the alliance and
Thackeray met governor Bhagat Singh Koshyari and staked claim late on Tuesday.
Koshyari gave Thackeray a letter informing him that he had been appointed as
chief minister and that the Aghadi claimed the support of 166 MLAs. This is
comfortably above the halfway mark of 145 in the 288-member assembly.
The governor also said Thackeray, who is
not a member of either House in the state, will have to get elected to either
one House within six months of taking oath.
“This is an alliance of parties with
divergent ideologies. This will give a new direction to the whole country... I
never dreamed of leading the state,” Thackeray said to thunderous applause.
“I will soon go to meet ‘Mota Bhai’ (elder
brother) in New


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