The announcement was made after a joint meeting between Maharashtra Congress chief Ashok Chavan and his NCP counterpart Sunil Tatkare at the residence of Radhakrishna Vikhe Patil, the Leader of Opposition in the state Assembly.
"We have decided to come together for all the upcoming polls to defeat the ruling BJP-Shiv Sena government. This was a primary discussion. We will meet once again to deliberate on the seat-sharing strategy," Chavan told reporters.
The bypoll to the Bhandara-Gondia Lok Sabha seat in east Maharashtra was necessitated following the resignation of its BJP MP Nana Patole, who returned to the Congress.
The Palghar Lok Sabha seat, neighbouring Mumbai, fell vacant after the death of its BJP MP, Chintaman Wanaga, last month.
The schedule for the bypolls is yet to be announced by the Election Commission.
The Congress and the NCP are, however, yet to arrive at a consensus on the contestants for both the seats.
NCP supremo Sharad Pawar had yesterday said that though weakened, the Congress was the only alternative to the BJP.
"Even though the Congress is considerably weakened over the years, Rahul Gandhi has shown willingness to learn and engage with the people. If the people support him, the Congress can be revived and the fact is that a strong opposition is required to strengthen democracy," he had said.
The NCP was part of the Congress-led UPA governments at the Centre and in Maharashtra earlier.
Both the parties had contested the 2014 Assembly polls separately.
Interestingly, the Congress recently expressed "practical difficulties" in renewing its alliance with the NCP for the 2019 Lok Sabha election and Assembly polls in Maharashtra.
In the saffron camp, the Sena and the BJP do not see eye to eye with each other.
The Sena has been sulking ever since it was made to play the second fiddle to the BJP, which had won more seats than the Uddhav Thackeray-led party in the 2014 polls.
Recently, Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis had held a closed-door meeting with Thackeray, triggering a speculation that the Sena was still keeping its alliance options open.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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