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Devendra Fadnavis Resigns After PM, Amit Shah Reportedly Send Him Message
Maharashtra Government:
The supreme Court had ordered the Fadnavis government to face a floor test
"immediately", saying if it was delayed, "there is a possibility
of horse-trading, it becomes incumbent upon the Court to act to protect
democratic values".
NEW DELHI:
Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union Home
Minister Amit Shah met this morning, immediately after the Supreme Court
ordered Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis to prove his majority
tomorrow, sources say. Not long after that meeting, Devendra Fadnavis resigned
as Chief Minister.
The
two top leaders of the ruling BJP reportedly discussed the options after the
Supreme Court order, whether Devendra Fadnavis should face the test of strength
or whether he should quit.
The supreme Court had ordered the Fadnavis
government to face a floor test "immediately", saying if it was
delayed, "there is a possibility of horse-trading, it becomes incumbent
upon the Court to act to protect democratic values".
PM Modi and Amit Shah, who were at a function in
parliament to mark the Constitution Day, met soon after to discuss the verdict.
After the meeting, a message was given to Devendra
Fadnavis, sources say.
Mr Fadnavis announced his resignation at 3.30 pm.
Mr Fadnavis and Ajit Pawar of the Nationalist
Congress Party (NCP) were sworn in on Saturday morning in a deeply
controversial oath ceremony that suddenly flashed on TV screens a few minutes
before 8 am.
To facilitate the unscheduled oath, a central
government order revoking President's Rule in Maharashtra was issued at 5.47 am
after PM Modi used a rare clause to approve it without consulting the cabinet.
The manner in which the government formation took
place was challenged by the Shiv Sena-NCP-Congress alliance in the Supreme
Court.
The BJP claimed it had handed the Governor a letter
of support from 170 MLAs before being invited to form government.
After joining hands with the BJP, Ajit Pawar had
claimed the support of all 54 MLAs of his party NCP, but his uncle Sharad Pawar
had contested it.
Over the past three days, however, NCP MLAs who had
gone "missing" returned, some of them accusing Ajit Pawar of
misleading them.
Yesterday, the Shiv Sena-NCP-Congress combine
paraded their MLAs at a five-star hotel in Mumbai and said, "We have
162."


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