Kumaraswamy's swearing-in to be opposition's show of strength

IANS  |  New Delhi 

The swearing-in ceremony of Chief Minister-designate H.D. Kumaraswamy on Wednesday will be used as a "show of strength" of the opposition parties ahead of the 2019 polls, in a possible line up against the

Prominent leaders of around a dozen political parties including Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi, BSP supremo Mayawati, Akhilesh Yadav, Sharad Pawar, Tejashwi Yadav, M.K. Stalin, Ajit Singh, CPI-M and actor-turned-politician of Makkal Needhi Maiam are all set to share the dais on Wednesday.

Besides these political heavy weights, Chief Ministers Arvind Kejriwal (Delhi), (Kerala), Mamata Banerjee (West Bengal) and Chandrababu Naidu (Andhra Pradesh) are expected to attend the oath-taking ceremony.

Striking a different path, Chandrasekhara Rao -- who mooted the idea of an anti-BJP, anti-federal front -- will not be present.

The Chief Minister's office in confirmed that Rao will not be able to attend the ceremony due to some official engagements. However, informed sources said Rao did not want to share the dias with Congress leaders and thus met Kumaraswamy a day earlier.

Rao has held discussions with some opposition leaders including Banerjee over the formation of the federal front.

The effort of uniting the opposition parties gained momentum after and cast aside years of differences to come together to defeat the in two crucial bypolls in - in seats that had been held by and Deputy

Kumaraswamy was in Delhi on Monday where he met Congress leaders and discussed "long term relationship on mutual trust" of the newly-formed coalition and vowed to give a joint contest to the in in 2019 polls.

Responding to the efforts of the opposition, BJP claimed that the atmosphere in the country is in favour of and the NDA would retain power with bigger majority than 2014.

"What will Mamata Banerjee do in and what will Kumaraswamy do in Bengal," Shah said in response to a question on the efforts of Congress-led opposition and added that all these political parties were also against the BJP during the 2014 elections.

In an anti-climax to the hectic political developments since the split verdict in May 12 polls, the BJP lost power in Karnataka as Chief Minister resigned on Saturday just before the trust vote, as he did not have the numbers to prove his majority.

His resignation paved the way for the formation of a Congress-Janata Dal-Secular (JD-S) government headed by Kumaraswamy.

The May election in 222 constituencies of the total 224 threw up a hung House, with no party securing majority. Polls in two constituencies were deferred.

The BJP won 104 seats, the Congress 78, the JD-S 37, and one each was bagged by the and the Karnataka Pragnyavantha Janatha Party, and an Independent.

--IANS

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First Published: Tue, May 22 2018. 20:10 IST