
MVA wins 3 of 5 MLC seats; all eyes on Independent Satyajeet Tambe’s next move
The Hindu
The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party-Balasahebanchi Shiv Sena alliance managed to win just the Konkan teachers constituency seat
Following the Opposition Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) alliance’s big victory in the Maharashtra Council polls, the focus has shifted to the future plans of Independent candidate Satyajeet Tambe, who recorded a win from the Nashik graduates constituency seat.
The victory of MVA candidate Dhiraj Lingade from the Amravati graduates constituency on Friday ensured that it won three of the five seats that went to the polls, dealing a blow to the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party-Balasahebanchi Shiv Sena alliance that managed to win just the Konkan teachers constituency seat.
MVA-backed contestants Sudhakar Adbale and Vikrant Kale had won the Nagpur and Aurangabad teachers constituencies, respectively, on Thursday.
Mr. Tambe, former State Youth Congress chief and son of former party MLC Sudhir Tambe, said on Friday he would decide on Saturday if he would join the BJP or return to the Congress after holding a meeting with his supporters.
“The credit goes to the personal connect our family has with the voters. The win would have been sweeter if I had contested as a Congress candidate… I will announce my decision tomorrow,” he said, hinting that it was not the party, but a few Congress leaders who were behind the fiasco over his nomination.
Cracks had emerged within the MVA, comprising the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP), the Congress and the Uddhav Thackeray-led Shiv Sena, after the Congress chose Mr. Tambe’s father as its candidate from the Nashik seat. However, he withdrew his nomination at the last minute and Mr. Tambe entered the contest as an Independent, claiming to seek the BJP’s support.
Despite Mr. Tambe insisting that he still supported the Congress, the party high command initiated disciplinary proceedings against him and his father. The ‘rebel’, who is also the nephew of senior Congress leader Balasaheb Thorat, went on to defeat his nearest rival, Shubhangi Patil, an Independent backed by the MVA, by nearly 30,000 votes.