Mumbai: BJP and Shiv Sena have finally agreed to stay together to jointly fight the battle for Maharashtra in the coming assembly elections . According to sources, the prime minister Narendra Modi intervened at the last moment to save the almost broken alliance . Modi convinced both Amit shah and Uddhav Thakre to stay partners. After Modi's intervention, Shiv Sena supremo Uddhav Thackeray has accepted the formula suggested by the BJP for CM post, if well placed sources are to be believed.
Under this formula, whichever party wins maximum number of seats will get the CM post.
If these reports are to be believed then the BJP has also agreed to contest on 127 seats while Shiv Sena will contest on 147 seats. 14 seats will be given to the rest of small parties in the alliance.
Facing the media together for the first time in several days, senior Shiv Sena and BJP leaders today said the two parties were "firm" on continuing the alliance as they resumed the deadlocked seat-sharing talks for Maharashtra Assembly polls.
Top state leaders of the two oldest NDA allies sat down for talks ending a tense stand-off, a day after BJP President Amit Shah called up Sena chief Uddhav Thackeray in a bid to pull back the 25-year-old alliance from the brink of disintegration.
BJP had yesterday given a fresh proposal to the Sena, seeking for itself 130 of the state's 288 seats, a marginal climbdown from its earlier demand for 135, which its saffron ally had summarily rejected.
In an earlier proposal, BJP had suggested that the two major constituents of 'Mahayuti', a rainbow alliance of six parties, contest 135 seats each, leaving the rest for smaller partners which too had been trashed by Shiv Sena.
Senior Shiv Sena leaders including party MP and spokesman Sanjay Raut, its leader in the Legislative Assembly Subhash Desai and Rajya Sabha member Anil Desai drove down to BJP office in Dadar for the meeting, in an apparent softening of the party's stand after Uddhav's "final offer" of 119 seats to BJP on Sunday.
BJP's Maharashtra election in-charge O P Mathur, state President Devendra Fadvanis, Eknath Khadse and Vinod Tawde, Leaders of Opposition in the Assembly and Legislative Council respectively, were among those involved in the talks.
"Both parties today agreed that the alliance should remain. Both parties are firm that the old alliance should continue," Raut told reporters after the meeting.
"A new proposal came up today and it will be discussed with our other alliance partners later today," he said.
Tawde said neither party wanted the alliance to break. "It is the desire of Sena and BJP that the alliance continues. No leader from either party wants the 25-year-old alliance to break," he said.
Tawde said a new seat-sharing formula was discussed but did not disclose the details. "A final decision will be taken by this evening after consulting our 'Mahayuti' allies," he said.
Though there was no official word from either of them, the buzz was that Sena was agreeable to BJP's proposal of 130 seats but did not want its quota of 151 seats proposed by Uddhav to be slashed.
If agreed upon finally, it would leave the smaller 'Mahayuti' allies with just 7 seats to contest and the two major partners would have a tough time convincing them to accept it.
Other allies of 'Mahayuti' are--RPI (Athawale), Rashtriya Samaj Paksh, Swabhimani Shetkari Paksh and Shiv Sangram.
Blowing hot and cold yesterday, BJP general secretary incharge of Maharashtra Rajiv Pratap Rudy had said, "We are very keen that the alliance exists" but was prepared to contest all 288 seats "compelled" to break ties with Sena.