President Election in India 2017
President Election 2017:
As polling dates near, Amit Shah meets Mohan Bhagwat, but candidate name under wraps
Who will be India's next president?
This question is bogging the ruling BJP government and the opposition equally
as the dates of the elections come closer. Last week, BJP president Amit Shah,
breaking his silence over the topic, said that the party would consult
opposition parties, which have been working to forge unity over a joint
presidential candidate, before deciding on the ruling alliance's pick for the
top constitutional post.
Shah, however, parried a query on
whether the BJP would seek to build a consensus with the opposition.
"Consensus is a word that it is used in several ways. But we will hold
discussions with everybody, including opposition parties," he told PTI
during an interaction.
Parties like the Congress, Mamata
Banerjee-led Trinamool Congress and the Left have spoken about fielding a
"secular" opposition candidate if the BJP-led NDA picks a nominee
with Hindutva leanings. However, the ruling block is unlikely to be perturbed
with the stand of the opposition parties as numbers in the presidential
electoral college favour it.
Shah declined to speak about likely
names from the NDA for the president's post, claiming they have not decided on
anyone yet. "We have not decided on any name yet. We will first talk to
our NDA allies. Then we will talk to opposition parties," he said.
Initial discussions held within
party ranks in the BJP had catapulted veteran party
leaders Murli Manohar Joshi, LK Advani and External Affairs Minister Sushma
Swaraj as top favourites. However, after the special CBI court charged Advani,
Joshi and ten others in the Babri Masjid demolition case, chances of Advani and
Joshi seem bleak. Sources had told PTI, however, that the names of two other
women politicians are also doing the rounds — Lok Sabha Speaker Sumitra Mahajan
and Jharkhand Governor Draupadi Murmu.
Meanwhile, on 29 May, Shah met with
RSS chief Mohan Bhagwat at the Sangh headquarters in Nagpur amid intense
speculation that the NDA government might field either a Dalit or a tribal for
the post of the president. Sources told Hindustan Times that
both Bhagwat and RSS general secretary Bhaiyyaji Joshi wanted a person with a
Sangh Parivar background be nominated for the post of president. There were
speculations earlier that Bhagwat would be nominated as NDA candidate for the
next president but the RSS chief, himself, shot down that proposal.
The electoral college for the
presidential polls has a total of 11,04,546 votes with the BJP-led NDA's tally
currently standing at about 5.38 lakh votes. The NDA crossed the majority mark
in the electoral college after the YSRCP, the Andhra Pradesh party headed by
Jagan Mohan Reddy, announced his outfit's support for the ruling combine and
the TRS, which is in power in Telangana, indicated that it will follow suit.
The BJP is also hopeful of getting
the support of both the factions of the AIADMK, which is in power in Tamil
Nadu. The presidential election is due in July and the poll to the post of the
vice president is scheduled for August.
The electoral college for picking
the vice-president is clearly in the BJP-led NDA's favour with the alliance
having the support of 418 members out of 787, the combined strength of the Lok
Sabha and the Rajya Sabha.

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