NCP leaders Praful Patel and Ajit Pawar announce the end of alliance with the Congress on Thursday Sep 25,2014
After 15 years in power in Maharashtra, the ruling Congress and
Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) alliance split on Thursday Sep 25,2014 with the
latter pulling out, accusing its senior ally of high-handedness during
seat-sharing talks. The Congress however, alleged that the NCP’s
decision to split was pre-planned.
Deputy Chief Minister and senior NCP leader Ajit Pawar directly blamed
Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan for the break-up. “We have dealt with
several Congress chief ministers. But this time we were ignored in
seat-sharing talks and felt there was no option,” said Mr Pawar.
Union Minister Praful Patel said the Congress had taken the talks too
casually and kept the NCP waiting for weeks on its demands. . “Even
yesterday Mr Chavan spent the day in his constituency instead of being
available for talks,”said Praful
The NCP seemed to be weighing its
options based on news of a split within the saffron camp.
Their decision
was announced minutes after the Bharatiya Janata Party parted ways with
the Shiv Sena.
The split in the alliance will impact both parties who are already
facing major anti-incumbency and the Modi wave which decimated both
parties during the Lok Sabha polls.
After performing better than the Congress in the Lok Sabha, the NCP
demanded 144 of the state’s 288 assembly seats.
In 2009, it had
contested 114. The Congress offered 124 and was prepared to strike a
deal at 130 seats.
However on Tuesday, the NCP suddenly demanded that the Chief Minister’s
post be shared by rotation for a 2.5 year term.
“Demanding the CM’s post
by rotation was a clear sign that the NCP was not interested in the
alliance,” said a Congress Minister.
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