Times of India | 3 days ago | 22-06-2022 | 04:52 am
MUMBAI: The rebellion in Shiv Sena unfolded quietly, close on the heels of the MLC polls on Monday. Minister and rebel leader Eknath Shinde left for a hotel in Surat soon after, accompanied by more than two dozen party legislators, sources said. The party leadership realised by Tuesday morning that a chunk of its MLAs was uncontactable. The fact that they were holed up in the BJP stronghold of Gujarat was not lost on Sena leaders. "This is a conspiracy of BJP. Operation Lotus may have succeeded in MP and Rajasthan, but it will not succeed in Maharashtra," said Sena MP Sanjay Raut. He claimed that Sena MLAs were being held against their will in Surat. "Two of our MLAs, including Nitin Deshmukh, were beaten up," he said. BJP denied it had any hand in the rebellion. "BJP has not made any proposal of government formation to Shinde, nor has it received any such proposal from him. We will wait and watch," said BJP state president Chandrakant Patil. "After looking at the situation today, I feel some path will emerge," said NCP chief Sharad Pawar. By afternoon, Sena leadership hit back. Shinde was replaced as group leader of the Sena legislature party. The Sena leadership also called for a show of strength by the party rank and file in different locations in the city, including Shiv Sena Bhavan in Dadar. Sena also dispatched two emissaries - Thackeray's trusted aide Milind Narvekar and Thane legislator Ravindra Phatak - to Surat to talk to Shinde. It is they who facilitated the 10-15 minute dialogue between Shinde and Thackeray. Earlier in the day, Shinde had tweeted, "Balasaheb has taught us Hindutva. We have never and will never betray Balasaheb's thoughts and Dharamveer Anand Dighe saheb's teachings for power." Shinde's rising resentment is no secret. The leader from Thane, who inherited the mantle of Sena leader Anand Dighe, had emerged as an alternative power centre within the Shiv Sena and had chief ministerial aspirations. However, he saw himself being systematically edged out of decision-making, sources said. Congress leader Balasaheb Thorat told the Congress legislature party meeting that Thackeray had told them there was no threat to MVA. "The CM told us that MVA has the support of 155 legislators," Thorat told the CLP meeting. If a senior NCP cabinet member is to be believed, if Shinde can mobilise signatures of 37 Sena legislators, he will form a separate party to avoid the anti-defection law and ask Governor Bhagat Singh Koshyari for a special session of the legislature. "We are told that his letter to the governor is almost ready, the moment it is signed by 37 legislators, it will be handed over to Raj Bhavan. As per the provisions of the anti-defection law, Shinde will require the support of 37 legislators for the formation of a separate party. Under the anti-defection law, he will require two-thirds of the total strength of Shiv Sena," the NCP leader said. The NCP leader said the MVA will not be surprised if leader of opposition Devendra Fadnavis stakes claim for the formation of the government in the days to come. Fadnavis did not respond to TOI's messages and calls. Meanwhile, Thorat said it appears that a few Sena legislators have left for Gujarat, but most of them are keen to return to the party fold. "Several attempts were made to destabilise the MVA government. Both Congress and NCP are with Shiv Sena," he said.