Vijay Rupani resigned as Chief Minister of Gujarat on Saturday in an unexpected turn of events previous to an Assembly election in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s home state later next year.
“… has been a five-year journey for the development of Gujarat… under the guidance of PM Modi. Now, to further develop the state, with new energy and power, I’ve got decided to resign as Chief Minister,” Mr. Rupani was quoted by agency ANI.
“It is well-known the BJP, as a party, keeps changing as per requirements… it’s a specialty of our party that each worker delivers to the fullest, and that i too will still work for the party with the identical energy,” he added.
Mr. Rupani’s resignation (and, by default, his cabinets) leaves the ruling BJP with three options – appoint a successor, allow the state to return under President’s Rule, or have an early election.
Sources have said at now no decision has been taken on early polls and a change of guard – a brand new Chief Minister – is probably going to be the strategy.
Senior leaders BL Santosh and Bhupendra Yadav are in Ahmedabad to debate replacements.
Sources have said Mansukh Mandaviya, sworn in because the Union Health Minister in July, and Nitin Patel, who was Mr. Rupani’s deputy, are possible replacements. Both Mr Mandaviya and Mr Patel have reached the party office in capital Gandhinagar, ANI reported.
Another possibility, other sources said, is Praful Khoda Patel, who is currently the Administrator for the union territories of Dadra and Nagar Haveli, and Lakshadweep.
Mr. Patel was within the headlines in July after a series of controversial orders triggered massive protests in Lakshadweep and therefore the mainland.
Mr. Rupani resigned, sources further said, after the party’s central leadership expressed dissatisfaction along with his performance; they need to be called this a “course correction” by a celebration wanting to change things around if it feels unsure in its state leadership, particularly with key elections due next year.
The strategy, it seems, is easy – ‘if there’s resentment against state leadership, sort it out now.
There are recent examples – Karnataka and Uttarakhand – which make Mr Rupani the fourth BJP chief minister to quit his post within the last six months.
In July BS Yediyurappa resigned as Karnataka Chief Minister following resentment against him and his son, and unrelenting demand his removal by a piece of the party’s state unit. Before that, in Uttarakhand, Tirath Singh Rawat quit four months after replacing Trivendra Rawat.
Opposition reaction to Mr. Rupani’s resignation was led by Hardik Patel, the Working President of the Congress’ Gujarat unit, who declared “it is now clear the BJP proved to be an entire failure”.
“Resignation of Chief Minister could be a decision taken to mislead people of Gujarat…” he said, citing the “lack of oxygen during coronavirus (second wave)… ever-increasing inflation… rising unemployment… and shutting down of industries” as proof of the BJP’s misrule.
The Aam Aadmi Party, which produced solid leads to Gujarat local body polls in March before confirming in June that they will contest the Assembly election, tweeted a sarcastic swipe.
And independent MLA Jignesh Mevani tweeted: “Gujarat CM Vijay Rupani resigns: People of Gujarat would have appreciated had Mr. Rupani resigned for monumental mismanagement of Covid crisis. This resignation comes purely to require care of electoral arithmetic keeping 2022 Assembly polls in mind.”
Mr. Rupani, 65, was sworn certain a second term in December 2017 before Prime Minister Modi, Home Minister Amit Shah, and over a dozen other BJP chief ministers.
In the 2017 election the BJP claimed 99 of the state’s 182 Assembly seats – down 17 from 2012. The Congress won 77 seats – up 16 from the last polls