Mumbai, Sep 26 (IANS): A day after the NCP broke its 15-year-old alliance with the Congress in Maharashtra and withdrew from the Democratic Front government, Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan Friday submitted his resignation.
"After the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) ministers quit last night, the Congress-led Democratic Front government was reduced to a minority. Accordingly in the best democratic traditions, the CM decided to submit his resignation," a top official, declining to be identified, told IANS.
The development followed a meeting between Chavan and Governor C.V. Rao Friday morning.
The stage is now set for either imposing President's Rule or asking Chavan to continue as caretaker chief minister till the elections scheduled for Oct 15.
Earlier this afternoon, Leader of Opposition in the Assembly Eknath Khadse of the Bharatiya Janata Party, met the governor and demanded immediate dismissal of the Chavan ministry as it was reduced to a minority.
He also submitted a letter demanding imposition of President's Rule in the state in the wake of the latest political developments that shook the state.
BJP leader Ashish Shelar criticized Chavan's decision to quit after the Leader of Opposition's demand instead of having resigned gracefully Thursday itself after his government was reduced to a minority.
"The Congress-NCP government failed on all counts and could not even complete its full term. They don't deserve another chance and people must vote for the BJP," he said.
Known for political stability, Maharashtra was administered centrally only once since its creation in 1960 and that too for a few months - February to June 1980.
A piquant situation has arisen this time when the election process is already underway, voting scheduled after 20 days and the incumbent government which ruled for 15 years has been reduced to a minority.
In the outgoing assembly, the Congress had 82 legislators and its ally had 62 legislators, making it the single largest group in the 288-member assembly.
The main opposition grouping - BJP-Shiv Sena - had 90 (46 and 44 members respectively), with other smaller parties and independents accounting for the rest. The 25-year-old BJP-Sena alliance had also broken up Thursday.
The Congress had 22 ministers and NCP 20 ministers in the cabinet headed by Chavan.
Earlier Report
Tussle over CM's post led to break up of alliances in Maharashtra
New Delhi, Sep 26 (PTI): The tussle over chief minister's post led to the break up of rival alliances of BJP-Shiv Sena and Congress-NCP ahead of the October 15 Maharashtra Assembly polls.
The development was not unexpected given the fact that the BJP and the NCP, which were the junior partners in the rival alliances, were uneasy over the dominance of the Shiv Sena and Congress respectively.
The appointment of Prithviraj Chavan, as Maharashtra Chief Minister less than four years ago, was described by a senior Congress leader as an "experiment" based on his experience in the hope that it would galvanise the party.
But the way Chavan went about the task resulted in annoying many of his own partymen and also the NCP and its top leader in state, Deputy Chief Minister Ajit Pawar, say observers.
"How can a government function when the Chief Minister and the Deputy Chief Minister are virtually not on talking terms and plotting against each other," said another senior Congress leader.
As regards Shiv Sena and the BJP, the ties were getting strained over the years with the BJP feeling that the Sena was not acting in the NDA spirit.
It is to be noted that the Sena twice voted against NDA's Presidential candidates. It voted for a "Marathi" Pratibha Patil and later on for Pranab Mukherjee.
The refrain of BJP leaders was that they were not getting the respect and warmth they deserved from the Sena leadership in the last few years.
Shiv Sena was always the 'elder brother' in the saffron alliance with BJP playing a second fiddle to the aggressive leadership of the late Sena supremo Bal Thackarey in state politics while it was the BJP occupying the prime place in national politics.
BJP wanted a level playing field in the state in the wake of the spectacular performance by the NDA under Narendra Modi in the Lok Sabha polls.
BJP was seeking a larger space in state politics in the changed situation which the Shiv Sena under Uddhav Thackarey refused to yield and even gave enough indications about his desire to be the chief minister if the alliance wins.
BJP's late leader Pramod Mahajan was the architect of the alliance which he had fashioned along with Bal Thackarey to meet the challenge posed by the then dominant Congress in the state politics.
The Congress and the NCP were in alliance in the state for the past 15 years as they came together to share power, months after NCP chief Sharad Pawar parted ways with Congress on the issue of Sonia Gandhi's foreign origin.
In Pawar's own words, "significant differences on critical issues" forced NCP to take "bold" step of ending the 15-year old alliance with the Congress in the state.
In a series of tweets, Pawar today said, "I would like to say that there were significant differences between our party & Congress on various critical issues. Due to time constraint & other issues, we were compelled to take bold step to end 15 years of alliance with Congress in Maharashtra."
While he did not elaborate on what were the critical issues, NCP had pulled a rabbit out of its hat by raising the demand for rotational Chief Ministership at the last minute during the seat sharing issue with Congress in Maharashtra.
NCP had sought Chief Minister's post for half of the 5-year term if the alliance retained power. The formula was adopted by the Congress in Jammu and Kashmir sometime back with its then state partner PDP.
Supporters of Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan were hinting for long that Ajit Pawar would not like the alliance to take place as he aspired for the top post.
Incidentally, Shiv Sena is the second largest constituent of the BJP led-NDA while NCP is the second largest party in the Congress led UPA in the opposition.
While the Congress under the dominant Marathas had kept its hold over the state's politics, the Shiv Sena-BJP alliance was essentially an OBC affair.