Updated July 17th 2024, 18:55 IST
New Delhi: Uttar Pradesh Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) chief Bhupendra Chaudhary reportedly offered to resign from his position following a crucial meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi on Wednesday. However, in the key meeting, which lasted over 45 minutes, Chaudhary was asked to continue as UP BJP chief for the next 2 months, according to sources.
Sources close to the matter had revealed that the BJP chief Bhupendra Chaudhary accepted moral responsibility and expressed his willingness to step down. Following the meeting with PM Modi, Union Home Minister Amit Shah was also seen visiting the Prime Minister's residence.
Uttar Pradesh BJP president Bhupendra Singh Chaudhary met Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday, sources said and is believed to have briefed him on a host of issues related to the party's organisational matters in the politically crucial state.
Chaudhary and the state's Deputy Chief Minister Keshav Prasad Maurya had met BJP national president J P Nadda separately on Tuesday amid signs of dissonant voices emerging from within the party in the state where it suffered shock losses in the Lok Sabha polls at the hands of the SP-Congress alliance.
Maurya's differences with Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath are widely acknowledged even within the party, and his comment at a state party meeting that "organisation is always bigger than government and no one can be bigger than the organisation" was seen by many political watchers as a message to the monk-politician.
He had made the remarks in presence of Adityanath and Nadda, while the chief minister blamed "over-confidence" for the electoral reverses in the state and suggested that the party could not effectively counter the opposition INDIA bloc's campaign.
With the party's top brass speaking to Maurya and Chaudhary, considered a sober and objective voice, they seem to be taking steps to put their house in order against a resurgent opposition in the state, which has been critical to the BJP's rise as the dominant national force since the 2014 Lok Sabha elections.
The deputy chief minister further stirred the pot on Wednesday by posting his "organisation is bigger than government..." comments from his office's handle. In private conversations, a number of BJP leaders from the state, including those who lost in the Lok Sabha polls, have been critical of the chief minister's working style and cited it as one of the reasons for their loss.
However, Adityanath is seen by his supporters as a popular chief minister who has aggressively pursued the party's Hindutva agenda and maintained a firm grip on law and order.
A senior party leader acknowledged that comments from several leaders in the state have dented its image of a disciplined party but added that it was also expected as they needed to vent out their feelings after suffering a defeat which few saw coming.
BJP sources said their top priority right now is to do well in the assembly bypolls to 10 seats in the state. The Election Commission is likely to announce the date for the polls soon.
Published July 17th 2024, 17:22 IST