Incumbent Deputy Chief Minister Nitin Patel will also continue to hold his post following his election as the deputy leader of the BJP legislature party.
Both of them were elected unopposed at a meeting of the BJP legislators here in the presence of central observers- Finance Minister Arun Jaitley and party general secretary Saroj Pandey.
"A proposal to elect Rupani as the leader of the state BJP legislature party and Nitin Patel as the deputy leader of the legislature party has been adopted," Jaitley told a press conference.
The BJP won 99 seats in the 182-member Assembly, the first time its tally slipped below hundred since 1995, while challenger Congress clocked its best in many years, clinching 77.
Rupani's proximity to the top party leadership, his clean and caste neutral image apparently tilted the scales in his favour.
Jaitley said the central observers asked the MLAs for names for the posts of the leader and deputy leader of the legislature party, and one of them--Bhupendra Sinh Chudasama-- suggested Rupani and Patel. Five other MLAs backed Chudasama's proposal.
Asked why was there the suspense over who would be the next chief minister, Jaitley said, it was a "media creation".
He said Rupani will hold consultations with MLAs and senior leaders before forming the new government. Rupani, he said, will meet Governor O P Kohli and finalise the date for the swearing-in.
The new government, according to party sources, is likely to be sworn in on December 25 to coincide with the birthday of former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee. There is, however, no official confirmation yet.
Rupani, who successfully staved off a spirited challenge from the Congress, overcoming the incumbency factor, farm distress, angst and anger over demonetisation and GST in the state with a large population of traders, will have to show his political sinews and sagacity when Narendra Modi bids for a second shot at power in 2019.
After his election, Rupani said although over 49 per cent vote share in the Assembly polls was a "huge achievement" for the BJP in Gujarat, the party would analyse its defeat in districts like Amreli, Gir-Somnath and Morbi, where it lost a majority of seats.
"We will do an analysis of our defeat in districts where we won fewer seats. We will also interact with the local people (to understand the reasons for it)," he said, adding the government will work for all sections without discrimination.
Before the BJP legislature party met in the state capital today, independent MLA Ratansinh Rathod declared his support to the ruling party. With this the BJP now has the support of 100 MLAs in the 182-member Assembly. The opposition Congress has 77 MLAs and the backing of three others.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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