[Coming in for special criticism was the Goa Forward Party, which had
projected itself through the campaign as a stauchly secular
organisation in opposition to the BJP.]

https://scroll.in/article/831639/goa-election-2017-as-bjp-stakes-claim-anger-among-supporters-of-regional-party-that-allied-with-it

ASSEMBLY ELECTION RESULTS

Goa's 'legally legitimate but morally illegitimate government': Anger
in state as BJP stakes claim
Many who voted for the Goa Forward Party, which positioned itself as a
secular organisation, feel let down.

10 hours ago.

Pamela D’Mello

Anger erupted among some sections in Goa on Sunday night as the
Bharatiya Janata Party said it had stitched together enough support to
continue to run the state government, even though Saturday’s Assembly
election results gave the saffron party only 13 seats in the 40-member
house.

To some in the state, the BJP’s decision to seek the support of eight
members of smaller parties and independents was a direct contradiction
of the verdict of the voters.

“It is a legally legitimate but morally illegitimate government,”
lawyer and political commentator Cleofato Almeida Coutinho told
Scroll.in. “ You are manipulating the mandate, distorting it and
making a fraud of the mandate.”

In the election, eight of the 12 ministers of the government run by
the BJP in an alliance with the Maharashtrawadi Gomantak Party lost
their seats. Among them was Chief Minister Laxmikant Parsekar. The
BJP’s alliance with the Maharashtrawadi Gomantak Party crumbled in the
months leading up to the election.

On Saturday, the Congress emerged as the single largest party with 17
seats. The Maharashtrawadi Gomantak Party and Goa Forward Party bagged
three seats each, while the Nationalist Congress Party got one. Three
independents also emerged victorious.

Stitching it up
Late Sunday night, the three members of the Goa Forward Party – which
had positioned itself as being anti-BJP – announced that they were
throwing in their lot with the saffron party. Earlier in the day, the
BJP obtained the support of the three MLAs of its former ally, the
Maharashtrawadi Gomantak Party, was well as two independents and
staked its claim before Goa Governor Mridula Sinha to form the
government.

Their letters of support were conditional on Manohar Parrikar being
made chief minister. Parrikar had last served as the state’s chief
minister from 2012 to 2014, until he was inducted into the Union
cabinet as defence minister. On Sunday, the BJP announced that he
would resigned from that central position to return to Goa.

The BJP said its decision to make a bid for government was based on
the fact that it had gained the largest vote percentage. But not all
voters were convinced by this logic.

“The mandate is clear,” said Raju Nayank, editor of Lokmat newspaper.
“The BJP should accept the verdict and sit in the opposition.”

Secular credentials
***Coming in for special criticism was the Goa Forward Party, which
had projected itself through the campaign as a stauchly secular
organisation in opposition to the BJP.*** [Emphasis added.]

Over the past five years, its leader Vijai Sardessai has been a
trenchant critic of the BJP’s policies.

Within minutes of Goa Foward’s legislators meeting the governor, the
organisation’s president Prabhakar Timble resigned mailed his letter
to the media.

“I found the decision a bit abrasive and abrupt,” he told Scroll.in.
“Not that the BJP is untouchable. Our main plank was to keep the BJP
out of power. So the first thing was we should have supported the
Congress to form the government and if that were not possible then we
could have considered other alternatives.”

He added: “I don’t want to be the face of the party in this situation.”

However, Timble said he would not leave the Goa Foward Party. “Why
should I not continue with the party?” he asked. “The BJP and Congress
make hundreds of mistakes but their members dont leave”, was his
logic.”

Other supporters of the party were more critical.

Cardiologist Dr Francisco Colaco who was a staunch supporter of the
party and its general secretary Vijai Sardessai described the alliance
as a meeting of devils. ”Today we are faced with the greatest betrayal
of all times,” he said.

In the morning, when it emerged that the Goa Foward Party was
negotiating with the BJP, Colaco took to social media to say, “ Beware
GFP. Please don’t upset the verdict. I’ve given my heart and soul to
support GFP....The Fatorda electorate is restivr and closely watching
the developments. Beware.”

Another supporter of the Goa Forward Party, lawyer Cleofato Almeida
Coutinho said it was a personal blow to him. “The GFP might not have
had an alliance with the Congress leadership, but the Congress people
and the Congress voters were with them,” he said. “They have let down
all these people.”


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Peace Is Doable

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