The Congress appears to have averted a possible split in its legislative wing in Goa for the time being, as on Monday it claimed the support of seven of the 11 party MLAs in the Bharatiya Janata Party-ruled state which saw assembly polls just four months ago.
A day after five out of the 11 MLAs went incommunicado, Goa Congress chief Amit Patkar said the number of MLAs with the party has risen to seven -- two more than Sunday's count -- and the party has also sought the disqualification of a couple of legislators.
These so far 'out of reach' MLAs attended the monsoon session of the state assembly which began on Monday and claimed there was "nothing wrong" in the opposition party.
These MLAs are -- Michael Lobo, Kamat, Kedar Naik, Rajesh Faldesai and Delialah Lobo.
Patkar said senior leader Mukul Wasnik has reached Goa and a new leader of the opposition will be announced to succeed Michael Lobo, accused by the party of "conspiring and hobnobbing" with the BJP.
Patkar said Wasnik will hold a meeting of the Congress legislature party.
”MLA Aleixo Sequeira and another Congress MLA have come to us. We had five MLAs with us on Sunday evening, now we have seven MLAs with us,” he told reporters.
Patkar, however, refused to identify the seventh legislator.
A day earlier, the Congress had said five of its 11 MLAs in Goa had gone "incommunicado".
The Congress had accused two of these legislators -- Michael Lobo and former chief minister Digambar Kamat -- of "conspiring and hobnobbing" with the ruling BJP to engineer a split in the grand old party's legislative wing.
The party removed Michael Lobo from the post of leader of opposition in the assembly, which has 40 members.
Congress's Goa in-charge Dinesh Gundu Rao had also said that five other legislators, excluding those who went incommunicado, are with the party.
They are Altone D'Costa, Sankalp Amonkar, Yuri Alemao, Carlos Alvares Ferreira, and Rudolf Fernandes. These five MLAs were present at a press conference addressed by Rao on Sunday.
He had said the sixth MLA, Aleixo Sequeira, is in touch with Congress leaders and is "very much" with the party.
He said Congress leaders met assembly speaker Ramesh Tawadkar to inform him about the removal of Michael Lobo as the LoP.
Michael Lobo claimed there was nothing wrong in the party.
”There is nothing wrong. I don't know what is the problem. All Congress MLAs were together. We went to South Goa for a meeting on Sunday. They (Congress leaders) again wanted to have another press conference which was not required, so we did not attend it,” said Michael Lobo, whose wife Delialah is also a Congress MLA.
He said they won the state election on the Congress's ticket and they stand with the party.
On replacing him as the leader of opposition, Michael said he had told the party that he was not be interested to continue in the cabinet rank post.
Former chief minister Kamat and his Congress colleague Rajesh Faldesai also said they were with the party.
Talking to reporters outside the assembly complex, Kamat said he was very much with the Congress.
”I had met Dinesh Gundu Rao on Saturday. I told him that I am hurt because of the humiliation that I faced in the party,” the former CM said, adding that rumours of him joining the BJP were floating since 2017.
”I stayed with the Congress. I led the party from the front during the assembly election (earlier this year), but after the polls, I was not given the post of leader of opposition,” Kamat said.
MLA Faldesai said he was with the party and had informed Patkar about his absence (from the party office on Sunday) as he was at home due to personal reasons.
Before the commencement of the assembly session, a senior Congress leader said they had moved five other MLAs, who were with the party, to an undisclosed location, to avoid a 'split' in the outfit and that they will attend the session.
Meanwhile, the Congress filed petitions with speaker Tawadkar seeking disqualification of its MLAs Michael Lobo and Kamat.
"Disqualification petitions have been filed against both the MLAs as they have voluntarily given up membership of the party. There is a Supreme Court judgment which states that any anti-party activity amounts to giving up of the membership of the party." Patkar claimed.
He said the BJP's move to split the Congress legislative party had failed as it could not muster the required numbers of legislators needed to do so without attracting provisions of the anti-defection law.
"The BJP wanted to repeat what they have done in Maharashtra through money and muscle power. We ensured on Sunday that the defection in our party stops," Patkar said.
A rebellion in the Shiv Sena led to the collapse of the Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) government in adjoining Maharashtra last month.
The BJP is resorting to such tactics as it does not want any opposition in the states where they are ruling, the GPCC president alleged.
However, the BJP rubbished the Congress claims and asserted that it had nothing to do with whatever is happening in the opposition party.
Talking to reporters at the party office in Panaji, Goa BJP spokesman Yatish Naik said political developments that started in the Congress on Sunday were due to internal differences in the opposition party and the saffron outfit should not be accused of trying to engineer a split.
"The BJP has nothing to do with whatever is happening in the Congress party," he asserted.
Asked whether "dissident" Congress MLAs had met Chief Minister Pramod Sawant, Naik said, ”Due to the ongoing assembly session, many MLAs may have been meeting the CM. That does not mean the BJP or the state government is involved in something."