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‘When people bat for caste, caste struggle continues

Former Karnataka Chief Minister H D Kumaraswamy acknowledged on Thursday that the five ‘guarantees’ of the Congress “lured” people in the 10 May Assembly elections and not the ‘Pancharatna’ programme promised by his party, Janata Dal (Secular). Speaking about the demand from various communities that the chief minister should be from among them, Kumaraswamy said […]

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‘When people bat for caste, caste struggle continues

Former Karnataka Chief Minister H D Kumaraswamy acknowledged on Thursday that the five ‘guarantees’ of the Congress “lured” people in the 10 May Assembly elections and not the ‘Pancharatna’ programme promised by his party, Janata Dal (Secular).
Speaking about the demand from various communities that the chief minister should be from among them, Kumaraswamy said a chief minister should not belong to any one community but work to improve the lives of all 6.5 crore people in the state. He also said he would like to see how the Congress would implement those schemes and the conditions attached to availing of the benefits.
“The Pancharatna scheme we promised and the efforts I made day and night for six months to popularise it did not attract people. People might have been lured towards those small guarantee schemes of Rs 2,000 (Congress guarantee schemes),” Kumaraswamy told reporters here. Speaking about the success of the five ‘guarantees’ of the Congress, the JD(S) second-in-command said, “We have to see. Aren’t those who prepared these schemes more experienced than me? They must have made some calculations.”
The Congress has promised 200 units of free electricity to all households and Rs 2,000 to women heads of families every month, among other promises. Referring to the poll outcome, Kumaraswamy said “such poor results” were not unexpected for his party. In 1999, former Prime Minister and JD(S) supremo H D Deve Gowda lost two places, and the party won only 10 seats, but five years later it bounced back with 58 seats.
To a question about the results in JD(S) stronghold Mandya district, where the party won only one out of seven seats, Kumaraswamy said the BJP wanted to “finish off” his party. Regarding the pontiffs of the dominant Vokkaliga community demanding that a Vokkaliga be made Chief Minister, the JD (S) leader said the seers might have said it out of love.
“They (seers) said it because they wanted someone from their community to become the chief minister. I won’t call it wrong, but one thing I would like to say is that when people bat for their caste, caste struggle will go on. This is my opinion,” Kumaraswamy said. “A chief minister should not belong to one community.

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