Gowda leaves for Delhi to meet BJP leaders
Amid speculation about his replacement to quell dissidence in the ruling BJP in Karnataka, Chief Minister D V Sadananda Gowda on Saturday left for New Delhi responding to summons from his party high command.
“My party high command has called me to Delhi. I am leaving today”, Mr. Gowda, for whose scalp the rebels led by former Chief Minister B S Yeddyurappa have been pressing for, told reporters.
BJP sources said the party’s Parliamentary Board was expected to deliberate on the Karnataka crisis this evening to hammer out a solution.
Buckling under B S Yeddyurappa’s pressure, BJP on Saturday decided to replace Sadananda Gowda with Jagdish Shettar as Chief Minister of Karnataka marking the third change in the state in four years.
The decision was taken at the BJP core group meeting on Saturday, sources said.
Mr. Shettar, a Lingayat leader, who is the Rural Development Minister, is the choice for the top post of Mr. Yeddyurappa, who is calling the shots in Karnataka BJP even after his unceremonious exit as Chief Minister last year. He will be the third BJP Chief Minister in the state in four years since the party came to power there in 2008.
After the core group meeting, BJP spokesperson Ravishankar Prasad said that Mr. Gowda will come to Delhi and will be meeting party chief Nitin Gadkari, L K Advani and other leaders.
“A decision will be announced after that,” Mr. Prasad told reporters.
Mr. Gowda took over from Mr. Yeddyurappa in August last year.
Mr. Yeddyurappa, who was removed as Chief Minister last year in wake of corruption allegations against him, has been insisting for some time now that Mr. Gowda should be replaced with his close associate Mr. Shettar.
However, Mr. Gowda, who fell out with the Yeddyurappa camp had pleaded with the party that it should not take any decision in “haste” and sought to assert that he has strived to give a corruption—free administration in the last 11 months, after he was appointed as Chief Minister.
With this change of guard, the political history witnessed in Karnataka from 1989 to 1994 of having three Chief Ministers in a span of five years has had a repeat.
Congress, which returned to power with a massive mandate in the state in 1989, replaced Veerendra Patil with S Bangarappa. Veerappa Moily replaced Bangarappa following heightened dissidence against him. In the assembly polls held in 1994, Janata Dal trounced Congress.