Pawar says NCP will give Maharashtra stability with Shiv Sena and Cong.
The Hindu
BJP is trying to topple the ruling MVA alliance by unleashing Central agencies against its leadership, NCP chief says
After its expectations of forming a government in Maharashtra by legitimate means were dashed, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was attempting to seize power in the State by unleashing Central agencies against the three-party Maha Vikas Aghadi (MVA) coalition, said Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) chief Sharad Pawar on Friday.
Speaking during a day-long visit to Jalgaon district, Mr. Pawar, whose NCP shares power with the Shiv Sena and the Congress in the MVA government, further said that it would be his party’s endeavour to take both parties along in future elections as well in order to give Maharashtra “a stable government” and maintain “social equilibrium” in the State.
“Those [the BJP] whose expectations have been frustrated will do anything to grab power…one aspect of this is the continuous Enforcement Directorate (ED) raids. When the BJP saw that the three-party MVA is standing firm, Central agencies were let loose against us,” he said.
After the 2019 Maharashtra Assembly election, the Shiv Sena fell out with the BJP over the Chief Minister’s post, thus terminating a 25-year-old alliance between the two saffron parties. The Sena forged a coalition with the ideologically opposed NCP and Congress to form the MVA government with its president Uddhav Thackeray as Maharashtra’s Chief Minister. However, Mr. Pawar is said to have been the architect of this unlikely political coalition of the three parties.
Expressing concern over the need to maintain social unity across the State, Mr. Pawar said that the earlier political tradition of resolving issues amicably was now changing. He was alluding to the BJP’s use of Central agencies and Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) chief Raj Thackeray’s adoption of hardline Hindutva tactics, which could potentially disrupt communal harmony in the State.
The NCP chief also took potshots at BJP leader Devendra Fadnavis’ Twitter attack against him on Thursday, remarking that he [Mr. Pawar] failed to understand why Mr. Fadnavis persisted on dubbing him “casteist” when the NCP was one of the few parties to give political opportunities to people of all castes and communities.
“I fail to understand why Mr. Fadnavis is calling me ‘casteist’… I am amused by his tweets. It appears he has nothing to say of substance, so he is talking in this manner,” Mr. Pawar said.