Non-Congress candidate to keep BJP at bay
The NDA bloc will have 104 seats in total, while the Opposition will have 117. This is excluding the TRS, BJD, PDP and YSR Congress.
New Delhi: The election for Rajya Sabha deputy chairperson promises to be a thriller, with the Congress deciding in principle to back a candidate from any other Opposition party to keep the BJP out, unlike during the presidential election last year when it had insisted on having its own candidate Meira Kumar to represent the Opposition.
Shortly after meeting the CMs on June 16 this month, senior Congress leader Ahmed Patel called Trinamul chief Mamata Banerjee and both leaders are learnt to have discussed the issue.
Sources in the Congress said that since then the party leadership, including its president, had discussed the matter and decided to go along with any non-Congress candidate to keep the BJP at bay.
The Trinamul Congress has, however, officially denied that Mr Roy's name had been finalised. The Opposition parties are likely to meet in the first week of July after the incumbent, P.J. Kurien, retires on July 2.
A senior Opposition leader said the high tea hosted by vice-president M. Venkaiah Naidu on July 1 for Mr Kurien would be the first informal meeting point for the Opposition leaders. As on July 1, the Congress will have 50 seats and the BJP 69.
The NDA bloc will have 104 seats in total, while the Opposition will have 117. This is excluding the TRS, BJD, PDP and YSR Congress.
The last time that an election was held for Rajya Sabha deputy chairperson was in 1992.