"The Constitution is supreme for me," Rajasthan Governor Kalraj Mishra said on Thursday, and refuted allegations that he had acted under the central government's pressure in the political tussle.
The Governor also asked the Gehlot government to make all efforts to check the spread of coronavirus and focus on development work in the state.
In an interview to PTI, Mishra, who on Wednesday agreed with the state Cabinet's proposal to call an assembly session from August 14, said he has always directed the state government to follow constitutional provisions in sending its request for convening a session.
He had asked the state Cabinet to follow the 21-day notice requirement to call a session while turning down its earlier three proposals before finally agreeing to call the session.
"The Constitution is supreme for a governor. There is no pressure on me," he said when asked about the Congress' charge against him.
Mishra, who was one of the senior most Bharatiya Janata Party leaders and a former union minister before being made Governor, also expressed his anguish at the protests by Congress legislators inside Raj Bhawan, saying this was not an 'appropriate' behavior against somebody holding a constitutional post.
He also rejected any comparison between the protests by Congress MLAs and the one by BJP lawmakers, including him, in Uttar Pradesh in 1995 against then state governor, saying UP agitation was held outside Raj Bhawan and it did not violate any decorum.
The BJP MLAs had then protested against the infamous 'guest house' incident in which Bahujan Samaj Party supremo Mayawati was allegedly attacked by some people at the behest of Samajwadi Party leadership.
Asked about his expectations from the Rajasthan government, Mishra said it should speed up development work and work out a strategy to curb the spread of COVID-19.
"The state government should take care of the common man. Attempts should be continuously made to spread awareness among the masses to curb the global pandemic.
"An atmosphere should be created that people should not fear (the disease). All out efforts should be made to check the pandemic," he said.
With most of the ruling Congress MLAs being put up in a five-star hotel in Jaipur to deal with the political crisis following a revolt by former deputy chief minister Sachin Pilot and 18-odd MLAs loyal to him, the BJP has accused the state government of not taking adequate measures to deal with the pandemic, and other issues facing the state.
The Congress has accused the BJP of trying to poach its MLAs in league with party dissidents to allegedly topple the Gehlot-led government.
The BJP has denied the charge and termed the political crisis an outcome of internal feud in the Congress.