New Delhi: The Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) has called its core committee meeting in Mumbai on Monday to take a ‘final call' on the 15-year old alliance with the Congress for the upcoming assembly elections in Maharashtra.
“The Congress has not responded to our proposal. We can give them one more day,” NCP leader Praful Patel said, adding that ‘no new proposal has been received by the party.
The NCP is sticking to its demand that it should get 144 seats.
“We stand by our original demand for 144 assembly seats. Time is of the essence as the election process has already begun,” he added.
His statement came even as Congress looked for ways to end the impasse with leaders from Maharashtra, including Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan and PCC chief Manikrao Thakre, holding consultations with some central leaders.
There was no word from the Congress on the way ahead and a section of Maharashtra leaders have been alleging that Deputy Chief Minister Ajit Pawar was the stumbling block in efforts to find a solution.
Patel, the NCP vice president, had on Saturday given the Congress a day to respond on the issue of seat sharing for the October 15 assembly polls in Maharashtra saying that his party could wait no longer.
"The filing of nominations has begun. We can wait for a day more for Congress's response on our proposal on the quantum of seats," Patel had said, though he had clarified that it was not meant to be an ultimatum.
In New Delhi, Maharashtra Congress chief Manikrao Thakre had on Saturday said they have put the ball in NCP's court and claimed that the Sharad Pawar-led party is yet to give a ‘positive response' to the former's proposal for seat-sharing.
After a meeting of the party's Central Election Committee (CEC) here on Saturday, he had said that Congress will have to prepare for all 288 seats in the state if a response from NCP does not come within a day or two.
The CEC had held deliberations on the selection of candidates for the 174 seats in Maharashtra which the party had contested in the last assembly polls.
Patel had said that they ‘received a proposal that NCP should contest 124 seats, 10 more than what we contested in 2009 polls. We want to clarify that 124 is the number of seats we contested in 2004' and added that the old formula does not apply now after the party got more seats than Congress in Maharashtra in the recent Lok Sabha polls.
In the last assembly elections, Congress had contested 174 seats while the NCP had put up 114 candidates.
Congress and NCP have shared power in Maharashtra since 1999, soon after Pawar quit Congress on the issue of party chief Sonia Gandhi's foreign origin. NCP has also been part of the Congress-led UPA at the Centre since 2004 and is the second-largest constituent in the opposition alliance.
The talk in the Congress is that while they are ready to give around 128 to 130 seats to NCP, nothing beyond this is possible.