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Regular-article-logo Friday, 19 April 2024

Karnataka: Yediyurappa awards 10 defectors with cabinet berths

The then disqualified Congress-JDS MLAs had shifted loyalty to the BJP and won the December by-elections for the ruling party

PTI Bengaluru Published 06.02.20, 07:14 AM
The decision to take none of the "native" BJP leaders into the cabinet in the current round came after intense lobbying from several aspirants which threatened to go out of hand at one stage, party sources said.

The decision to take none of the "native" BJP leaders into the cabinet in the current round came after intense lobbying from several aspirants which threatened to go out of hand at one stage, party sources said. (AP)

Karnataka chief minister B. S. Yediyurappa on Thursday rewarded 10 defectors, who helped the BJP bring down the Congress-JDS coalition and come to power, with cabinet berths.

The then disqualified Congress-JDS MLAs who had shifted loyalty to the BJP and won the December by-elections, were sworn in at a simple ceremony at Raj Bhavan with the governor Vajubhai Vala admistering oath of office and secrecy.

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The newly-inducted ministers are S. T. Somashekar (Yeshwantpur constituency), Ramesh Jarkiholi (Gokak), Anand Singh (Vijayanagar), K. Sudhakar (Chickballapur), Byrathi Basavaraj (K. R. Puram), A. Shivaram Hebbar (Yellapur), B. C. Patil (Hirekerur), K. Gopalaiah (Mahalakshmi Layout), K. C. Narayana Gowda (K. R. Pet) and Shrimant Balasaheb Patil (Kagwad).

The much-awaited expansion takes the strength of the cabinet to 28, with six vacancies now.

In the first expansion last August, 17 ministers were inducted.

The latest exercise wasn't without a twist.

Yediyurappa had announced on Sunday that 13 aspirants, including the ten who were sworn-in on Thursday and three BJP old-timers would be inducted.

The three expected to get cabinet berth were Umesh Katti, Arvind Limbavali and C. P. Yogeshwar.

A section of the BJP had opposed making Yogeshwar a minister, pointing out that he had lost Assembly elections and not a member of either House.

Late on Wednesday, Yediyurappa said induction of BJP old-timers had been put off following directions from the party's central leadership.

The decision to take none of the 'native' BJP leaders into the cabinet in the current round came after intense lobbying from several aspirants which threatened to go out of hand at one stage, party sources said.

The 10 newly-inducted ministers were among the then 16 Congress-JDS MLAs who brought down the coalition government headed by H. D. Kumaraswamy.

Among these disqualified MLAs, 13 had contested the by- polls in December and 11 had won.

The one who had been left out in the cabinet expansion is Athani MLA Mahesh Kumathalli, who has been promised by the chief minister 'some other big responsibility'.

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