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Karnataka: Cong-JDS leaders battle coalition turmoil post poll debacle

Bengaluru: As the Lok Sabha poll debacle pushed the ruling Congress-JDS coalition in Karnataka into a greater turmoil, leaders of the two parties on Wednesday held intense consultations to avert a potential existential crisis to the one-year-old H D Kumaraswamy ministry.

Rushed here by the party high command on a damage control mission, Congress general secretary K C Venugopal held meetings with Chief Minister H D Kumaraswamy and senior party leaders and ministers to save the coalition from an intensified BJP onslaught.

Coalition worries have been compounded by the BJP's spectacular win with 25 of the 28 Lok Sabha seats in its pocket, leaving a mere one seat each to the Congress and JDS, which, despite a joint fight, were swept away by the Modi wave.

Buoyed by the landslide win in the LS polls, the BJP, which emerged as the single-largest party in the 224-member assembly in the May polls last year, is reportedly eyeing to capture power amid reports of a rift between the coalition partners.

The BJP had won 104 seats and added one more to its tally in the bypolls held along with Lok Sabha elections. The Congress had won the Kundgol bypoll. The ruling combine has 117 members -- 78 of the Congress, 37 of the JD(S), one of the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) and one Independent. Plans for cabinet expansion or reshuffle were discussed by Venugopal with Kumaraswamy, Congress Legislature Party (CLP) leader and Coordination Committee chief Siddaramaiah, Deputy Chief Minister G Parameshwara and Pradesh Congress chief Dinesh Gundu Rao, Congress sources said.

Venugopal also met several Congress ministers in the coalition government and will take part in the CLP meeting scheduled later in the evening.

During the meeting, the leaders discussed the electoral debacle and alleged threat to the coalition from the BJP, Congress sources said.

According to sources, the leaders at the meeting were unable to reach any consensus on whether to go in for cabinet expansion by filling three vacant posts or reshuffle by asking a few ministers to step down and make way for the disgruntled lawmakers.

A section of party leaders including Siddaramaiah are said to be of the opinion that cabinet expansion may be suitable, as any attempt for reshuffle may further worsen the situation, when the

Chief Minister initially came up with the suggestion of cabinet reshuffle.

Several senior ministers not willing to give up ministerial berths now will make the cabinet reshuffle a hardball, sources said.

Leaders are now expected to take a call on this after wider consultation with legislators and the Congress high command.

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