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The BJP on Saturday recorded a landslide victory in the hill state of Uttarakhand, winning 57 of the 70 seats contested. Now, the focus shifts to the race within the party’s fold for the post of Chief Minister. Here’s a quick look at the top contenders for the job.
Standing tall as one of the favourites in the race for CM is 66-year-old Satpal Maharaj, the former Congressman, who on Saturday won the Chaubattakhal constituency on a BJP ticket. While in the Congress, the spiritual guru-turned-politician even served as Minister of State for Railways and Finance at the Centre. He crossed over to the BJP in 2014 and is, according to the Association for Democratic Reforms, the richest candidate to have contested the Uttarakhand assembly elections.
Along with Maharaj, BJP’s national secretary and party-in-charge for Jharkhand, Trivendra Singh Rawat, is among the forerunners for the CM’s post in the hill state. Rawat has administrative experience on his side and has represented Doiwala, the constituency he won on Saturday, twice in the past.
A former Chief Minister of Uttarakhand, a veteran BJP leader and known for his clean image. You’d say those three factors should make Khanduri more of a favourite than a contender. So what goes against the 82-year-old?
Additionally, Khanduri was also held culpable for the BJP's defeat in the previous Assembly polls in 2012. Those closely tracking the BJP, also say that it is unlikely that Modi and Amit Shah will pick an ex-Chief Minister for the top post.
74-year-old Sangh veteran Bhagat Singh Koshyari had served as the CM of Uttarakhand between October 2001 and March 2002. Will Koshyari’s proximity to the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh help him edge past others in this tightly contested race for the Chief Ministership? And will Nagpur be able to call the shots, given the BJP’s thumping victories in UP and Uttarakhand?
Bahuguna has been credited in leading the en masse movement of several Congress leaders from the grand old party to the BJP. Will the party leadership reward the former Congress Chief Minister handsomely for switching to the BJP right before the polls? Or will they stay wary of appointing a turncoat as CM?
But if the norms of political opportunism in Indian politics are anything to go by, the BJP and Bahuguna have left the past where it belongs. Yet, especially if he can avoid it, will Modi want a long-time Congress loyalist as his satrap in the hill state?
Harak Singh Rawat, a former Congress minister, who was part of the coterie that rebelled against the Congress government last year, on Saturday, won the Kotdwar constituency on a BJP ticket.
In a political drama that unfolded last year, the BJP had demanded the resignation of outgoing Chief Minister Harish Rawat, following allegations made by a woman in connection with a rape case filed against the BJP’s Harak Singh Rawat. A woman who, in an FIR, had accused Harak Singh of raping her, had then made a U-turn and alleged that she had done so under pressure from CM Harish Rawat.
As often the case with Indian politics, everybody’s got an expert opinion, but it’s still anybody’s guess.
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