SC order on floor test in K'taka assembly 'historic', BJP 'baffled' as it lacks numbers: Cong

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

Hailing the Supreme Court's order of holding floor test in the assembly as historic, the today accused the BJP of being baffled and frustrated as it lacked numbers to prove majority and objected to the appointment of a BJP MLA as the ahead of the confidence vote tomorrow.

It is a historic interim order by the apex court of the country. It is historic because directly, with this degree of specificity it is raised for the first time, the extent of rights and discretion of the to call A' or B' for government formation immediately after the election, Singhvi said.

To a question that the BJP has accused the of being baffled and frustrated to retain power in the southern state, Singhvi said it was ironical and funny for the NDA to have said so in the face of defeat.

He referred to BJP legislature party B S Yeddyurappa's seeking more time from the apex court to prove majority after it ordered floor test to be conducted tomorrow itself.

Don't you see the message is clear in that (when Rohatgi asked for more time to prove majority)? Why Monday? To do what you could not do for three days (after Yeddyurappa wrote letter to staking claim to form government on May 15), Singhvi added.

Another aspect of the BJP's frustration, Singhvi said was K K Venugopal pitching for the use of secret ballots for confidence vote during the floor test on the instructions of the Centre.

As you know, secret ballot has never ever been used for a confidence vote. But more importantly who will ask for a secret ballot? Why? he asked.

Earlier, Congress's welcomed the Supreme Court's order, saying the Constitution has rejected the "unconstitutional" decision of the

"Constitution wins, Democracy restored! B S Yeddyurappa does remain a 1 day CM - Constitution rejects an illegitimate CM as also the unconstitutional decision of Governor of (sic)," he said on

Singhvi, who represented the Congress-JD (S) combine in the apex court, had said that the "Interim B S Yeddyurappa has been restrained from taking policy decisions till tomorrow".

The BJP, which emerged as the single largest party with 104 seats in Karnataka assembly, was invited by Governor to form the government despite the JD(S)-Congress combine staking claim by citing the support of 117 MLAs.

The majority mark is 112.

In a historic pre-dawn hearing, the top court had yesterday cleared the last-minute hurdle created by the Congress-JD(S) combine for the BJP's ambitious surge in by paving the way for Yeddyurappa to be sworn in as the of Karnataka.

During the high-voltage hearing, which lasted from 2.11 AM to 5.28 AM, the top court had made it clear that the swearing-in and government formation would be subject to the final outcome of the case.

Today, a three-judge bench headed by Justice A K Sikri said, "Let the House decide and the best course would be floor test."

The apex court also directed the and the Governor not to nominate any MLA from the Anglo-Indian community to participate in the floor test tomorrow.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, May 18 2018. 17:20 IST