Exactly a month after setting a target of 150 seats for the Karnataka Bharatiya Janata Party for the 2023 assembly polls, Union Minister Amit Shah arrived in the city late on Monday, this time amid buzz over possible changes in the leadership, and pressure to rejig or expand the cabinet.
He was received in the city's HAL airport by Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai and several of his cabinet colleagues and Union Minister Pralhad Joshi, among others.
Shah had last visited the state on April 1 and attended the state BJP core committee meeting, during which the target was set and discussions were held on induction of leaders from other political parties ahead of the elections, and strengthening the organisation
Though largely seen as an official visit, with less than a year for the assembly polls, Shah during this trip is likely to meet senior party leaders including Bommai and B S Yediyurappa, and assess the BJP's preparations for the elections.
The leaders are likely to meet over lunch at Bommai's official residence on Tuesday, and then at the party state office in the evening.
"He (Shah) is coming, I will be meeting him. He will try to know about the political situation in the state. As state elections are ahead, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Amit Shah have decided to give priority to Karnataka. He is likely to give suggestions on reaching the 150 seats target that we have set for the assembly polls," Yediyurappa told reporters in Shivamogga.
Shah is scheduled to take part in several events including a valedictory function of 'Khelo India' University Games here on Tuesday, and will also be paying tributes to 12th-century social reformer and Lingayat saint Basavanna on the occasion Basava Jayanthi.
Lingayats are a dominant community who have significant presence across the state and are considered as the strong vote bank of the BJP.
Other events he is scheduled to attend are inauguration and foundation stone laying of various projects including the Nrupathunga University, e-inauguration of the Forensic Science Laboratory in Bellari, the inauguration of Bengaluru NATGRID Campus.
Bommai, who is under pressure to expand or rejig his cabinet at the earliest, ahead of the assembly polls, has already indicated that he would try to discuss it with Shah during this visit.
With the cabinet exercise taking time, voices of discontent seem to be brewing within the ruling BJP, as party MLA M P Renukacharya recently had openly expressed displeasure about the delay and working of few ministers.
The MLA, who is also the chief minister's political secretary, said several party legislators are of a similar opinion and they feel that if new faces are inducted into the cabinet, they would work aggressively and bring a good name to the BJP and the government ahead of the 2023 assembly polls.
There are currently five positions vacant in the state cabinet, which has 29 ministers including the chief minister, against the sanctioned strength of 34.
Some legislators have even been advocating a Gujarat-like overhaul of the Karnataka Cabinet soon, to make way for new faces, ahead of the assembly elections.
The cabinet exercise will be crucial ahead of the assembly elections, in which the saffron party aims to return to power once again, and has set a target of winning a minimum of 150 seats in the 225-member House.
The visit also comes amid a fresh round of speculation about leadership change in the state.
BJP national general secretary BL Santhosh's statement on Sunday that the party's strength lies in the induction of new faces has set off this fresh round of speculation over leadership change in the state.
However, a senior BJP functionary said the party was unlikely to replace Bommai, who replaced veteran leader Yediyurappa as chief minister in July last year, and too much is being read into Santosh's statement.
Yediyurappa too on Monday had dismissed such speculation, saying Bommai was doing a "good job."
There have also been rumours for some time now that the state BJP president Nalin Kumar Kateel, an MP, might be replaced.
The visit of Shah comes after the state witnessed a series of incidents -f communal flare ups, 40 per cent commission allegation against the government, resignation of senior minister KS Eshwarappa following the alleged suicide of a contractor naming him, and alleged scam in the recruitment of police sub-inspectors, among others.
With opposition parties cornering his government on all these issues, Bommai had recently said the BJP will reach out to the people for assembly elections with positive politics and its report card on positive governance.
This was after BJP central leadership asking the leaders of its Karnataka unit and ministers to bring the developmental agenda to the fore and showcase the achievements of the government in view of the polls, amid a flare-up in communal issues in the state.
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