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Hooda, Mayawati hold closed-door meet on Haryana; BSP not keen

NEW DELHI: Speculation is rife over an alliance between the Congress and the BSP in Haryana after a closed-door meeting between Bhupinder Hooda and Mayawati in New Delhi, party insiders said.

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Aditi Tandon
Tribune News Service
New Delhi, September 8
 
Speculations are rife over a pre-poll alliance between the Congress and the BSP in Haryana after a closed-door meeting between two-time former Chief Minister Bhupinder Singh Hooda and Mayawati in New Delhi, party insiders said on Monday.
 
The meeting that lasted for over half an hour on Sunday night saw the presence of newly-appointed state Congress president Kumari Selja, too.
 
It is learnt that the BSP is not too keen on a pact and may eventually go alone on all 90 seats in the state although an official statement from Mayawati has yet to come.
 
The Congress, however, is hoping to bring Mayawati around.
 
The BSP has consistently snubbed Congress overtures in recent past—ever since the Congress refused to accommodate Mayawati in the Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan elections last year.
 
The meeting was in the backdrop of Bahujan Samaj Party supremo Mayawati withdrawing pre-poll alliance last week with the Indian National Lok Dal's (INLD) breakaway faction Jannayak Janata Party (JJP), led by Dushyant Chautala, the grandson of O.P. Chautala.
 
The JJP had offered 40 seats to the BSP, which it refused.
 
Announcing the decision to end the alliance, Mayawati said the agreement reached with Chautala was "inappropriate" in terms of the proposed seat-sharing formula.
 
Sounding a poll bugle, Prime Minister Narendra Modi at a public meeting in Rohtak on Sunday not only presented his government's report card in the first 100 days of governance but also praised the Manohar Lal Khattar-led government for fighting corruption and nepotism.
 
While the main opposition -- the INLD -- has been reduced to a minority as most of its legislators and leaders have joined the BJP, infighting continues to dog the Congress, which ruled the state for two consecutive terms.—with IANS.
 
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