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Uddhav is desperate for power, changes colours like chameleon: Eknath Shinde

Uddhav is desperate for power, changes colours like chameleon: Eknath Shinde

Hindustan Times19-06-2025
Maharashtra Deputy Chief Minister Eknath Shinde on Thursday dubbed his rival and Shiv Sena (UBT) president Uddhav Thackeray as a "betrayer", accusing him of being desperate for power and changing colours like a chameleon.
Speaking at the 59th Foundation Day of the party, he said while self-confidence led him and his party to success, Thackeray's ego led him to his destruction.
He also taunted Thackeray, saying he was eager to have an alliance with the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) ahead of the upcoming Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation polls.
"He is so desperate that he is seeking alliances," he said in a veiled reference to the possibility of Sena (UBT)'s alliance with the MNS led by Uddhav's estranged cousin Raj Thackeray.
Also Read | Question mark over the future of MVA amid talks of new alliances
Shinde said the ruling Shiv Sena functioned on the ideology of party founder Bal Thackeray, while the other side was desperate for power.
''We have the Shiv Sena bow and arrow symbol and people's support. We have protected Balasaheb's ideology,'' he said.
He said the Sena (UBT) did not even get one third of the votes polled by his Shiv Sena in the 2024 assembly polls.
"Whatever votes they got were because of the Congress as the real Shiv Sena voters have bid them good bye,'' he said.
Shinde said he has self-confidence, while the other side has ego. "Self-confidence has give us success, while ego has led to their destruction. Balasaheb opposed Congress, but those desperate for power aligned with that party. Sena (UBT) has betrayed Marathi people, Shiv Sena voters and Hindutva,'' he alleged.
Also Read | Uddhav rallies Shiv Sena (UBT) cadre for BMC polls, pitches 'Marathi pride'
Shinde said he has never seen a "betrayer'' like Uddhav Thackeray, who changes colours very easily like a chameleon as he wants only money.
"Those who are helpless for power cannot be Balasaheb's heirs," he said. The deputy CM said he will never compromise on Hindutva for power. "They consider BMC as golden goose. Mumbai and its importance is not under threat, but their politics and finances will come under threat as their soul is in the BMC treasury, while our soul is Hindutva. There will be no compromise on it,'' he said.
Is Hindutva a T-shirt that you can wear or remove any time, he asked, referring to Thackeray's statement that he has not quit Hindutva. "Why do you hesitate to call Balasaheb as Hindu Hriday Samrat (emperor of Hindu hearts). You join hands with those who abuse (Prime Minister Narendra) Modi and (Union minister Amit) Shah, who fulfilled Balasaheb's dream of Ram temple and abrogation of Article 370, and with those who abuse Savarkar and Hindu religion,'' he said.
He also mocked Uddhav Thackeray's ''kill me" remark and said mere talk is not enough.
"You need a tiger's heart and strength in your wrist. How can we kill someone who is already dead? People of the state have already finished them in the assembly polls...Don't provoke me. If someone does that, I don't leave them. I have already upturned your horse carriage and taken away your horses," he said.
Shinde questioned why Thackeray did not visit the families of the tourists killed in the Pahalgam attack. "Where were you? Where was your patriotism and love for Marathi that time?" he asked. After Operation Sindoor, Balasaheb would have praised PM Modi, whereas the Congress was questioning the armed forces and abusing him, he alleged.
"Are you an Indian or a Pakistani agent? Pakistan uses your statements against India. Rahul Gandhi has become a hero in Pakistan but is a zero in India," he said.
Shinde praised his son and Lok Sabha member Shrikant Shinde and Rajya Sabha member Milind Deora for being part of the all-party delegation after Operation Sindoor. Just like the Ladki Bahin scheme, the party has launched a Ladki Soon (daughter-in-law) scheme and it will fight for women facing domestic abuse, he said. He said 50 former corporators of the undivided Shiv Sena have joined his party.
"We will fight to win the local body elections. Decision on alliance will be taken at appropriate time," he said. "Balasaheb's ideology is our wealth," he said. Shinde asked his supporters not to get carried away by the assembly election results. "Get ready to win the local body elections," he said.
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‘0 plus 0 equals 0'—BJP taunts Thackeray cousins after their parties draw a blank in ‘litmus test'
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‘0 plus 0 equals 0'—BJP taunts Thackeray cousins after their parties draw a blank in ‘litmus test'

The rival panel of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) celebrated their defeat as if it were their victory. Known as the Sahara Samruddha Panel, the BJP panel led by leaders Prasad Lad and Pravin Darekar won seven seats. A third panel, led by Union leader Shashank Rao and named after him, won the elections with 14 seats. The Uddhav Thackeray-led Shiv Sena and the Raj Thackeray-led Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) joined forces to contest a hyper-local election to the BEST Employees Cooperative Credit Society. The results, announced early on Wednesday, showed that the joint panel led by the Thackeray cousins—known as the Utkarsh panel—lost all 21 seats. Mumbai: Amid talks of the estranged Thackeray cousins possibly reuniting, politically and otherwise, their parties have drawn a blank in the very first election they contested together. 'Those who went on saying Mumbai is ours, the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation (BMC) is ours, and if we win this election, we will win the BMC elections, have learnt a lesson that the Thackeray brand does not work. More than how many seats I have got, I am happier that the Thackeray brand got zero seats,' Lad said Wednesday at a press conference. 'We have 100 percent passed the litmus test.' The BEST cooperative credit society has 15,123 members, including both current and former employees with the Brihanmumbai Electric Supply & Transport (BEST) undertaking. Most employees are Mumbai-based, Marathi-speaking people, with the election viewed as a small teaser of where the loyalties of the Marathi voter base lie. The hotly contested election saw a record turnout of at least 84 percent of the members amid allegations made by Shiv Sena (UBT)-MNS members that the BJP-led panel had bribed the members to vote in their favour. The last election to the committee was nine years ago, when a panel led by Shashank Rao's father, Sharad Rao, won. Sanjay Raut, a Rajya Sabha MP from Shiv Sena (UBT), speaking to reporters in Delhi, dismissed the election results as local polls fought between trading unions. 'Elections to such cooperative credit societies are more about the trade unions trying to show their strength. The Thackeray brand will never fail. However, I would not comment on these elections till I have information about them. Elections to cooperative credit societies are not an exam. It is not even a preliminary test,' Raut said, adding that some leaders came together and fought elections. 'These elections are not fought on party lines. It is not anyone's big success or defeat.' 'Zero plus zero equals zero' Since the past two months, the Thackeray cousins have shown signs of reconciliation and a possible united electoral battle against the ruling Mahayuti, comprising the BJP, the Eknath Shinde-led Shiv Sena and the Ajit Pawar-led Nationalist Congress Party (NCP). The Thackeray brothers held a massive joint rally earlier in July to oppose the three-language policy proposed by the Mahayuti-led government and the alleged imposition of Hindi. Leaders from both sides are sending out feelers of a potential alliance for the benefit of the local Marathi population. The BEST cooperative credit committee poll was the first that the two parties joined forces for. Suhas Samant, a Shiv Sena (UBT) leader who steered the party into the election, said, 'Both parties worked for the election. It was an experiment that we tried. The karyakartas of both parties hit the ground running for the campaign. Neither of the two parties is at fault.' He said that the union of MNS and Shiv Sena (UBT) for the election put the BJP on guard, and the party used all its force and might to ensure the defeat of the MNS-Shiv Sena (UBT) panel. Union leader Shashank Rao, whose panel won the election, said, 'The question is not whether two brothers came together. If you work for the people, they will vote for you, even if you are alone; the workers have shown this.' He said the Thackeray-led Shiv Sena had always pushed for a pro-privatisation and anti-employee policy in the BEST undertaking. However, BJP leaders, such as Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis and state cabinet minister Ashish Shelar, have always aided the cause of BEST, he added. Lad and other BJP leaders maintained that the cooperative credit committee elections—previously never fought on party lines—were also not contested that way this time. 'The BJP did not back me in this, in any way. The Shiv Sena (UBT) tried to set a narrative. They thought they would get sympathy if they used Raj Thackeray's name, so they attempted to set a narrative. That boomeranged on them,' Lad told reporters. After the Shiv Sena (UBT) and MNS drew a blank, the BJP leaders made a concerted effort to target the two parties. Maharashtra BJP spokesperson Keshav Upadhye, in a social media post, said, 'One doesn't have anything to lose, and the other doesn't have anything to win. If one adds two such zeroes and puts any number of additional zeroes with it, the mathematical answer will be zero. Even children who have not been to school know this, but what happens when you don't see it? The answer to this question lies in the election of the BEST cooperative credit society.' Political commentator Hemant Desai said the Shiv Sena (UBT)-MNS should not have packaged the election as one where the Thackeray brothers were putting up a united front, and one that would be its litmus test. 'No cooperative credit society election had become as high-profile as this one has. The MNS-Shiv Sena (UBT) should not have made the election sound this prominent. Now, it is obvious the BJP will take advantage of their loss. The result is a definite slap for both parties in terms of optics and the morale of the party workers,' he said. (Edited by Madhurita Goswami) Also Read: 5 reasons Thackeray cousins Raj, Uddhav may bury hatchet, rally behind 'Marathi manoos' plank

Congress's allegations of voter roll manipulation could become a battle to save Indian democracy
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The response of the Election Commission of India to charges of voter list manipulation by Congress Member of Parliament Rahul Gandhi suggests that there may have been massive fraud in the electoral processes. Instead of offering a clarification or an investigation into the alleged 'vote theft', the Election Commission has asked the Leader of Opposition to sign an affidavit making the charges under oath or tender an apology, which sounds more like a threat than a clarification. It is unclear, however, for how long such alleged manipulation of voter rolls has been going on but the Election Commission seems in no mood to entertain any complaints. If this trend continues for the foreseeable future, with elections looming in Bihar and then West Bengal, what can the Opposition parties do? The Opposition could approach the two major allies of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party — Nitish Kumar's Janata Dal (United) and Chandra Babu Naidu's Telugu Desam party – to withdraw support from the Narendra Modi-led coalition government. The charges of electoral fraud would stick to them as well unless they distance themselves from the alleged fraud, and they will also be seen as complicit in the corrupt practices. The other option is for the Opposition to hope for an implosion in the BJP. The question then is whether all those BJP leaders who have been shortchanged by the present regime will rise in rebellion. There is a large section of disgruntled leaders and this might be their opportunity to assert themselves. Until now, the parent organisation of the BJP, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, has maintained a stoic silence on voter list manipulation charges. However, it may step in and take the reins to stem the damage to the credibility of the ruling BJP. It is quite possible that the Sangh will play a waiting game rather than take any decisive action immediately in a bid to salvage the situation. The Hindutva ideologues believe in the victor-vanquished philosophy and they firmly support victory at any cost because history, they think, only remembers the victor and pushes the vanquished into oblivion. This necessarily means one could justify violence and unrighteous actions to establish dharma. This mode of thinking is closely associated with producing demagogues like Narendra Modi who have an innate belief in their power to sway the masses. Modi seems to believe that he is still on a victory run and there has been little change in his demagoguery as well as dismissiveness of the Opposition. Opposition leader Gandhi, however, is convinced that the electoral results in the past have been compromised and were aimed at setting a dominant narrative formulated by Modi and the BJP. As he put it in his press conference, election results were justified based on creating a mahaul (atmosphere). He pointed to creating a narrative of victory to hide the 'voter theft'. However, the atmosphere is created not only by winning elections but by also selectively losing in a few constituencies. One cannot forget the fate of erstwhile Ashoka University professor Sabyasachi Das who had claimed that in 2019 elections BJP won a disproportionate number of seats in closely contested constituencies. He concluded that, 'The evidence presented is consistent with electoral manipulation and is less supportive of the campaigning hypothesis. Manipulation appears to take the form of targeted deletion of voter names of and electoral discrimination against India's largest minority group – Muslims – partly facilitated by weak monitoring by election observers. The results present a worrying development for the future of the world's largest democracy'. The greatest relief for the counter-offence of the Opposition is the uncompromising leadership of Gandhi. He does not seem to be driven by electoral calculations alone. He claims to be more inspired by the larger fight against fraud and stealing of democracy from the common people. He has repeatedly stated this is not a 'political' but a Constitutional battle to establish the principle of 'one man, one vote'. Gandhi's lack of interest in power machinations is visible in the trust reposed in his leadership by the parties that Congress is in contest against in many states. Those at the helm in the present regime may be driven by the fear of losing political power. This may drive them to extreme action against the Opposition. As of now, however, Gandhi's aggressive presence in the public domain seems to have diminished Modi's grandstanding. Perhaps after more than a decade in power, there is no more space left for reinventing Modi's Midas touch. Will Rahul Gandhi succeed in his endeavour of resuscitating Indian democracy? Every rebellion needs a convincing narrative and its acceptance by the masses. Gandhi has to link the issue of vote fraud to the people's basic concerns. It needs to take the shape of an anti-systemic narrative, which Modi had monopolised all this while. After more than 10 years as prime minister, Modi, however, can no longer continue to play an underdog without a political pedigree. Will people trust that Gandhi's is a fight to save the nation and not a bid to make a comeback? The answer will be evident if people turn out in large numbers in the series of nationwide protests he plans to organise.

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