Yeddyurappa, who has been named as the BJP's chief ministerial face for the Karnataka Assembly polls by party chief Amit Shah, said he and the workers of the saffron party were working towards achieving a 'Congress-mukt' (Congress- free) Karnataka as per the wishes of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
BJP would achieve its "mission of winning 150 (Assembly) seats" in Karnataka in 2018, he said at a meet-the-press programme organised by The Press Club of Bangalore and the Bangalore Reporters Guild.
Yeddyurappa, credited with leading the BJP to form its first ever government in the south in 2008, said he would like to repeat the feat, especially after Modi and Shah "honoured" him by announcing his name as the party's chief ministerial candidate for the next Assembly election.
He expressed confidence that the BJP would form government in Karnataka on its own and brushed aside any possibility of a coalition in the run-up to the election.
Asked about the corruption cases against him, Yeddyurappa, who had to quit as the chief minister in 2011 over graft charges, said except "two-three cases related to land denotification", his name had been cleared in all the cases.
Replying to another query, he said the BJP would use former chief minister SM Krishna's "IT-BT image" to woo the young voters of Bengaluru city.
Unhappy over the state of affairs in the Congress party, Krishna had recently defected to the saffron camp.
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