Deve Gowda sends feelers to the BJP
George Iype in New Delhi
Congress president Sitaram Kesri’s dubious heroism has led to hectic
political lobbying and backroom manoeuvring in the capital. Key
political players shuttled between party offices on Tuesday alternatively to
save or to bring down Prime Minister H D Deve Gowda when he seeks a
vote of confidence on April 11.
Two days after the Congress withdrew its support, it was Deve Gowda who
launched a frenzied operation to save his 10-month-old United Front
government. In a surprising development, the prime minister sent feelers
to the Bharatiya Janata Party soliciting its outside support to ward off
the Congress challenge.
On Tuesday, Deve Gowda sent a Rediff On The NeT columnist --
who must remained unnamed for now -- to senior BJP leaders Lal
Kishinchand Advani and Atal Bihari Vajpayee to negotiate the possibility of the
party extending unconditional support to the UF government.
The columnist, who is credited with being a catalyst for the
formation of the BJP-Bahujan Samaj Party government in Uttar
Pradesh last month, apprised the prime minister of the BJP’s demands
vis-a-vis its favour to the UF regime.
Sources claimed the BJP has set three conditions for supporting
the Deve Gowda government. First, it wants the prime
minister to leave the company of the Left parties, with whom the BJP is
unwilling to shake hands for obvious ideological reasons.
Second, the BJP leaders are also uncomfortable with its sworn enemy, Samajwadi Party
chief and Defence Minister Mulayam Singh Yadav. The BJP has argued that
dumping Yadav and his 16 SP MPs will give credibility
to the alliance it forged with the BSP last fortnight.
The third crucial requirement is that Deve Gowda announce a
mid-term poll as and when the BJP demands it. In return, the BJP
will support the UF government from outside and
allow the government to pass the 1997-98 Budget in Parliament.
Satish Aggarwal, a former Union minister who is close to Advani, told Rediff On The
NeT that his party is willing to back the UF government if Deve Gowda
and his partners agree to these demands.
"There is nothing wrong in the BJP helping Deve Gowda continuing in power. But we
will not allow the Left parties and Mulayam Singh Yadav to stay with
him," the BJP leader said.
Aggarwal claimed that Deve Gowda has taken a soft
line towards the BJP and its sister organisations in the past. "In 1995,"
he said, "Deve Gowda had
praised the Rashtriya Swayemsevak Sangh during a meeting to commemorate
the 20th anniversary of the Emergency."
But political observers feel that Deve Gowda's desperate plan to seek the BJP's
help for his government's survival is unlikely to take off as some
of the UF constituents -- the Tamila Maanila Congress, the Telugu Desam
Party and the Dravida Munnetra Kazagham -- will spurn any association with
Advani and company.
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