Nationalist Congress Party president Sharad Pawar on Sunday declared that he was not going to be the party’s chief ministerial candidate for the forthcoming Maharashtra assembly election slated for September-October.
Pawar, who interacted with party members on the occasion of the NCP’s 15th anniversary, rejected the ‘Ab ki bar, Sharad Pawar’ tune sung by a section of the party members.
He also snubbed his nephew and Maharashtra Deputy Chief Minister Ajit Pawar, who, in a recent interview to a publication, had argued that the NCP should declare its nominee for the assembly poll and contest it under his leadership. Ajit Pawar has never hidden his ambition to be state chief minister. He has been quite vocal in criticising the NCP’s decision to leave its claim over the chief minister’s post after the 2004 assembly election despite winning three more seats than partner Congress.
Pawar’s ‘collective leadership’ mantra has left Ajit to toe his uncle’s line. Further, other aspirants for the chief minister’s post including Chhagan Bhujbal, Jayant Patil and R R Patil will have to work together, keeping their ambitions aside.
NCP members were of the firm view that had Pawar been projected as the chief minister, the NCP’s winning prospects would have brightened. They argued that Pawar, who had assumed the office of Maharashtra chief minister four times, enjoys a good rapport with the bureaucracy and a cross section of society. Besides, Pawar’s candidature will help curb intra-party