Politics Sunday, July 06, 2008

Another Karnataka Congress legislator quits to join BJP

From correspondents in Karnataka, India, 05:00 PM IST

Congress legislator J. Narasimha Swamy quit the Karnataka Assembly Sunday to join the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) that is trying to reduce its dependence on independent candidates.

Swamy, son of Congress Lok Sabha member from Chikkaballapur R.L. Jalappa, is the second member of the main opposition party to resign a day after party legislator Anand Asnotikar from Karwar resigned to join the BJP.

Swamy was the Congress legislator from Doddaballapur constituency in Bangalore rural district.

"Swamy has submitted his resignation letter to state Assembly Speaker Jagdish Shettar. He has also resigned from the Congress primary membership to join our party. He will contest from the same constituency again in a by-election," BJP state president Sadananda Gowda told reporters here.

The state legislature office confirmed the speaker has accepted Swamy's resignation.

Swamy retained the Doddaballapur constituency in the recent assembly election by a margin of 3,754 votes.

"I am joining the BJP to develop my constituency, which remained neglected during the previous term due to political instability and fall of three coalition governments in the state. I have resigned as Congress legislator after consulting the electorate in the constituency. I am confident of winning in the by-election on the BJP ticket," Swamy told reporters at the party office.

Two Janata Dal-Secular (JD-S) legislators - Balachandra Laxmanrao Jarkhiholi from Arabhavi and K. Shivana Gouda Naik from Devadurga - also defected to the BJP after submitting their resignations to the speaker late Saturday.

With the resignation of four legislators in the last 12 hours, the strength of the newly constituted assembly has been reduced to 221 from 225, including one nominated member.

In the May assembly election for 224 constituencies, the BJP won from 110 seats, the Congress 80 and the JD-S 28. Independents bagged the remaining six seats.

The resignations also reduce Congress strength in the lower house to 78 and that of JD-S to 26.

By-elections to the four constituencies will have to be held in the next six months, as per the law.

Falling short of a simple majority by three seats, the BJP roped in the six independents to cross the half-way mark (113) in the assembly and form its own government for the first time in the state as well as in southern India May 30.

Five of the six independents were made cabinet ministers in the month-old B.S. Yeddyurappa government.

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Most Recent Comments

  • Thampi PKT Sunday, July 06, 2008

    What India really needs urgently is a national government with no parties. This tamasha of parties turning coats every so often, and under one pretext or the other cannot make a democracy in which the Opposition acts as a watchdog to prevent abuses and misuses of power by the ruling party or coalition. These all too frequent tamashas make a mockery of two or multi party democracy in India. In fact they prove the incompatibility to Indian mind and culture.

  • MMK Rao Sunday, July 06, 2008

    Strictly speaking, there is no difference in the ideologies professed by the Congress and the BJP, although both want to appear different, but respective propaganda machines keep the apparent differences seem like real. Our nation has had too much of disunity and difference which only reflects personal pettimindedness of politicians, nothing else. China, with a single party govt.all the time, is moving a hundred times faster than we.






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