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PM Modi, Amit Shah, J P Nadda met to take stock of Maharashtra after top court order
Soon after the joint sitting of both Houses of Parliament to commemorate
the 70th anniversary of the adoption of the Constitution, where Prime Minister
Modi also addressed the members, the trio met in the PM’s office in the
Parliament to discuss the outcome of the Supreme Court’s decision, people aware
of the developments said.
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The
decisions to give up the claim to form the government in Maharashtra and for
Devendra Fadnavis to resign from the post of chief minister were taken at a
meeting between Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Union home minister Amit Shah and
the working president of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), JP Nadda on Tuesday,
shortly after the Supreme Court’s order to conduct a floor test by Wednesday.
Soon after the joint sitting of both
Houses of Parliament to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the adoption of the
Constitution, where Prime Minister Modi also addressed the members, the trio
met in the PM’s office in the Parliament to discuss the outcome of the Supreme
Court’s decision, people aware of the developments said.
A senior party functionary who spoke on
the condition of anonymity said the party took the decision based on the
“situation” that had arisen in court. “We took the decision after the Supreme
Court order. Devendra Fadnavis resigned though he had the mandate along with
the [Shiv] Sena,” the functionary said.
On Tuesday, the apex court ordered a floor
test to determine the strength of the BJP-led Maharashtra government, after the
Maharashtra Vikas Aghadi — an alliance of Shiv Sena, Congress and the
Nationalist Congress Party — moved court over the swearing-in of Fadnavis as CM
and Ajit Pawar of the NCP as deputy CM on Saturday. The alliance claimed that
the BJP and faction of Ajit Pawar-led faction of NCP did not have the required
numbers to form the government. In the recently concluded state polls, the BJP
had won 105 seats, while its pre-poll ally, Shiv Sena, had won 56. The Congress
and NCP had won 44 and 54 seats respectively, while smaller parties and
Independents won 29 seats in the 288-seat assembly.
On November 22, the BJP approached
Maharashtra Governor Bhagat Singh Koshiyari claiming it had the numbers. On
what had transpired between the Ajit Pawar-led faction of NCP and the BJP and
whether the party was blindsided by the developments, the functionary quoted
above said, “…Anything is possible.”
The functionary also declined to comment
on Sena’s stance, and said, “…There are many things that cannot be divulged
at the moment.”
The Sena-BJP alliance fell out over a
disagreement over seat-sharing. The BJP asserted that as a senior partner of
the alliance, it had the mandate to retain the CM’s post for five years and the
Sena was responsible for walking out of a 30-year-old alliance. It defended its
alliance with the NCP on grounds that it was a coalition of “anti Emergency
forces”.
A second functionary who also spoke on the condition of anonymity said the party will take stock of the developments, and
meetings on the next move will be planned.


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