BJP denies poaching any Karnataka opposition members
October 22nd, 2010 - 7:05 pm ICT by IANS
New Delhi, Oct 22 (IANS) The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) Friday denied that it has launched “Operation Kamal” in Karnataka to lure away opposition legislators in the face of its dwindled strength in the assembly after the speaker disqualified 16 rebel legislators, including 11 from the party.
“No ‘operation Kamal’ is on. If some legislators have resigned, it is their decision. We are not going to make them ministers,” senior party leader Venkaiah Naidu said here in response to questions.
Asked about the CD released Thursday by Janata Dal-Secular (JD-S) leader and former chief minister H.D. Kumaraswamy containing alleged telephone conversation of a BJP legislator making attempts to lure away a JD-S legislator, Naidu dismissed it as a fake.
“Did he (Kumaraswamy) release his CD where he is offering allurements? Our state unit’s information is that the CD he released is not real. It is a man-made CD for a particular purpose,” Naidu said.
However, Naidu sidestepped a question about why the BJP had not released a CD of Kumaraswamy, in which the JD-S leader was allegedly attempting to influence BJP members to not go to assembly for the trust vote.
The BJP government in the state, led by Chief Minister B.S. Yeddyurappa, is struggling to survive following rebellion by 11 party legislators and five Independents.
While the 16 legislators have been disqualified and their appeal is pending in the Karnataka High Court, the Congress is claiming that its legislators are being offered Rs.50 crore (Rs.500 million) each by the BJP to defect. In the last few days, two Congress and one JD-S legislators have quit the assembly.
Yeddyurappa has rubbished the allegations and accused the Congress and the JD-S of holding the 11 BJP rebels hostages.
Kumaraswamy Thursday claimed that nine more Congress lawmakers and many from the JD-S were being targeted by BJP.
Following the revolt, Yeddyurappa has won two trust votes in the assembly. The first BJP chief minister in south India thus also became the first Karnataka chief minister to go in for two trust votes in three days.
He won the first trust vote Oct 11 amid chaos, following which Governor H.R. Bhardwaj recommended President’s Rule in the state. He, however, changed his mind and gave Yeddyurappa one more chance to prove his majority Oct 14.
Yeddyurappa won that test 106 to 100 votes, but the outcome is subject to the Karnataka High Court decision on the validity of the lawmakers’ disqualification.
With the court hearing on, the Congress has housed its legislators in a hotel, while the JD-S has taken its flock, along with the 16 rebel lawmakers, to a resort on Bangalore’s outskirts.
- Bangalore buzz: Bounty for 16 rebel law makers' support? - May 14, 2011
- Another Congress legislator quits in Karnataka - Oct 21, 2010
- Yeddyurappa safe as court upholds rebels' disqualification (Roundup) - Oct 29, 2010
- Kumaraswamy demands Yeddyurappa government's dismissal - Oct 11, 2010
- Congress legislator quits Karnataka assembly - Oct 20, 2010
- Governor for president's rule as Yeddyurappa 'wins' trust vote (Evening Lead) - Oct 11, 2010
- Yeddyurappa safe, for now - May 15, 2011
- Yeddyurappa wins third trust vote in nine months (Lead) - Jun 02, 2011
- Court upholds 11 Karnataka BJP legislators' disqualification (Second Lead) - Oct 29, 2010
- Karnataka BJP crisis deepens as more legislators join rebels (Roundup) - Oct 10, 2010
- Karnataka speaker rules out resignation - Jun 01, 2011
- Congress demands Yeddyurappa's ouster; governor meets PM (Lead) - May 14, 2011
- Karnataka Congress, JD-S threaten to boycott trust vote - Oct 13, 2010
- 11 Karnataka rebel BJP legislators get show-cause notice - Oct 08, 2010
- Congress undecided on disrupting Karnataka house - Jan 03, 2011
Tags: bharatiya janata party, bjp government, chief minister, crore, hostages, independents, jd, kamal, karnataka high court, lawmakers, legislator, legislators, New Delhi, opposition members, party leader, rebellion, revolt, rs 500, telephone conversation, trust vote