Jyotiraditya Scindia, whose rebellion against the Congress brought down the previous Kamal Nath-led Congress government in March this year, emerged a clear winner in this battle. Eleven Scindia supporters got a berth in the Cabinet. Of the nine former Congress MLAs who support Scindia and were administered oath, Mahendra Singh Sisodiya, Prabhuram Choudhary, Pradhuman Singh Tomar, and Imarti Devi were ministers in the Kamal Nath government as well.
Two of his supporters — Tulsi Silawat and Govind Singh Rajpoot — were ministers in the BJP government earlier. In all, 14 of the 22 breakaway Congress MLAs are now ministers.
Ramesh Mendola, close confident of party General Secretary Kailash Vijayvargiya, could not make it to the final list. The rivalry between Vijayvargiya and Chouhan is no secret.
“Scindia has extracted his price at the expense of Chouhan. BJP leaders who were left out will work against the interests of the Scindia loyalists in the upcoming byelections,” said senior journalist and political analyst Rakesh Dixit.
‘‘Scindia has no great influence in the region (Gwalior-Chambal). When the wind blew in favour of the Congress, his supporters won. Where was his influence in the elections of 2003, 2008, and 2013?” Dixit asked.
Another point to note is that among the 16 new ministers who were in the BJP, only seven were in the Cabinet earlier.
By-elections a crucial factor
There is only one minister from Mahakoshal (the Jabalpur/Chhindwara region), to which Kamal Nath belongs. Madhya Prant, inclusive of Bhopal, got only two ministers and the Nimar region, in southwest Madhya Pradesh, also two. It’s also two for the Vindhya region, where the BJP won the maximum number of seats.
It is clear that the road ahead is tough for Chouhan. A BJP leader said several former ministers including Pathak and Gauri Shankar Bisen were angry with the party leadership and their resentment could damage the party’s prospects in the by-elections.
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