Should Rly ministry be handed over to Mamata?
Having arrived in Parliament with a
bloc of 20 MPs, including one from Suci tagging on, Mamata Banerjee's Trinamool
Congress has settled for a single Cabinet berth, which she will keep for
herself. Initially, the offer from Congress negotiators Pranab Mukherjee and
Ahmed Patel was for two Cabinet and three minister of state portfolios,
according to highly placed sources.
The offer to Banerjee, who met Sonia Gandhi on Wednesday and was in touch with
Patel and Mukherjee over phone through Thursday, was made in two packages. The
first offered two Cabinet and three MoS berths while the second package offered
one Cabinet and five MoS slots.
The probables likely to make it as ministers of state from Trinamool Congress
are Saugata Ray, Dinesh Tribedi, Sultan Ahmed, Sisir Adhikari and in all
probability, TMC's Rajya Sabha member Mukul Roy. While Sultan Ahmed is the
Muslim face of the party, Sudip Bandopadhyay missed the bus as the TMC chief is
cut up with him for refusing to be chief whip of the party in Parliament.
Gobinda Nashkar, an SC MP, has been made deputy leader of the parliamentary
party. Two other members, including Chaudhury Mohan Jatua, are likely to be
made chairmen of standing committees that will come the TMC's way.
The ministries she is looking at are those she feels can impact the lives of
the poor and the rural populace in West Bengal, with her target being the
assembly polls in 2011. With that in mind, Banerjee has given her preferences
for health, rural development, urban development, tourism and I&B/culture.
Her idea for not going in for "attractive" ministries is also that
there would be less chances of allegations of corruption against her team
before assembly polls in Bengal.
Mamata had asked for one seat more than DMK, that is a total of seven ministers
including herself, as she got 19 plus one that is 20 members while DMK comes to
the House with 18. But now that DMK has decided on outside support to the
government, there is pressure on Mamata from her party to get more ministerial
berths.
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