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This is an archive article published on June 29, 2023

D for detente: Chhattisgarh turns to the tried and tested Dy CM formula

3 of 4 Cong govts now have a Dy CM, while in Rajasthan, a rebellion did one in; BJP is no exception in these times of compulsions and coalitions

TS Singh Deo, Chhattigarh news, Political pulseChhattisgarh Chief Minister Bhupesh Baghel with State Minister T.S. Singh Deo after a meeting with Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge, in New Delhi, Wednesday, June 28, 2023. Deo on Wednesday appointed as Deputy Chief Minister of Chhattisgarh. (PTI Photo)
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D for detente: Chhattisgarh turns to the tried and tested Dy CM formula
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The Congress on Wednesday appointed T S Singh Deo as the Deputy Chief Minister of Chhattisgarh. It is expected to cool frayed nerves in the state Congress months ahead of fresh Assembly polls, with the erstwhile royal at loggerheads with Chief Minister Bhupesh Baghel ever since the party came to power in the state in 2018.

Earlier in May, the Congress central leadership had appointed Karnataka PCC president D K Shivakumar as Deputy Chief Minister in the state, following a four-day deadlock over the Chief Minister’s chair. Though Siddaramaiah was eventually named CM, the party is yet to reveal whether the agreement between Siddaramaiah and Shivakumar involved a term-sharing pact — the rumours of such a pact in Chhattisgarh, incidentally, have plagued the Baghel government throughout.

Like in Chhattisgarh, the Deputy CM post has largely come to be seen as a compensatory or conciliatory measure, or as part of an arrangement, as parties try to balance several interests.

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At present, at least 11 states (including Karnataka) have Deputy CMs. In the Northeast, with multi-party coalition governments the norm, four of the seven states have Deputy CMs.

The Andhra Pradesh government has the highest number of Deputy CMs — five, including Rajanna Dora Peedika; Budi Mutyala Naidu; Kottu Sathyanarayana; K Narayana Swamy; and Amzath Bhasha Sheikh Bepari.

In Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous state, with a 403-member House, there are two Deputy CMs — Keshab Prasad Maurya and Brajesh Pathak – seen as a balancing exercise to accommodate different communities, given that CM Yogi Adityanath holds complete sway over the administration.

Among the longest serving Deputy CMs in the country has been BJP leader Sushil Kumar Modi, who served as JD(U) supremo Nitish Kumar’s Deputy in Bihar for a decade, between November 2005 and June 2013 and from July 2017 to December 2020.

Coalition govts

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In Haryana, Jannayak Janata Party (JJP) leader Dushyant Chautala was accommodated as Deputy CM after the BJP fell short of a majority in the 90-member House at the time of the 2019 Assembly elections. The newly-formed party had won 10 MLAs, putting it in the kingmaker position.

The ties between the two parties, however, have lately been strained, with suggestions that they might not fight the next Assembly elections together.

In Maharashtra, a similar arrangement holds the government of the Shinde Sena and the BJP together. Here, while the BJP is the bigger party, it conceded the CM post to Eknath Shinde, as he did the improbable by breaking away with a large part of the Shiv Sena to help the BJP topple and replace the Maha Vikas Aghadi government.

BJP leader Devendra Fadnavis, who was seen as instrumental in the whole power change, had to be content with being Deputy CM. However, he remains equally — if not more — powerful than the CM, especially with Shinde’s position as the paramount leader of the Shiv Sena (despite the Election Commission’s stamp on it) still shaky.

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In Bihar, the arrangement is much the same, with the largest party of the Mahagathbandhan, RJD, taking the Deputy CM post to let JD(U) leader Nitish Kumar hold the chief ministership – at least for now. Here again, it was Nitish’s breaking of ties with the BJP that facilitated the Mahagathbandhan government, and the much-younger Tejashwi Yadav has deferred to his senior as Deputy CM.

Lately, hints have been emanating that Nitish is ready to move on to a central role post-2024 polls, with Tejashwi finally moving into the hot seat.

Recent elections

In Nagaland, after the Nagaland Democratic Progressive Party (NDPP) and ally BJP secured an easy victory in the Assembly elections held earlier this year, the NDPP’s Neiphiu Rio returned as CM, while the party’s T R Zeilang became the deputy.

In the Himachal Pradesh election that the Congress won in December last year, the Congress faced the same dilemma as Karnataka over the CM post. The party took two days to finally zero in on Sukhvinder Singh Sukhu as CM and the party’s Mukesh Agnihotri as his Deputy CM – which was a first for the hill state.

Problems of plenty

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With Karnataka and Chhattisgrh cracks papered over, the Congress still has to take care of Rajasthan, another poll-bound state, where the tussle between Ashok Gehlot and Sachin Pilot keeps flaring up. After the 2018 results, while Gehlot was seen as more acceptable to MLAs and popular across the state, Pilot saw himself as the truly deserving candidate for having rallied the party through his years as the state Congress president.

Deliberations had stretched over two days, and Delhi and Jaipur, before Gehlot — who had by this point been a two-time CM — was picked. Pilot became Deputy CM. A later rebellion by Pilot though ended up costing him both the Deputy CM and PCC president’s posts.

The post’s legal standing

Unlike CM and minister posts, the Deputy CM post is not a constitutional one. It is equivalent to the rank of a Cabinet minister (in the state) and enjoys pay and perks a Cabinet minister is entitled to.

The same applies to the post of Deputy Prime Minister, which was first held by Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel while Jawaharlal Nehru was the PM, representing different streams of political thought within the Congress party.

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The Deputy PM or CM posts are not mentioned in Article 75 – which deals with appointment of the Union Council of ministers – or in Article 164, which deals with the appointment of state Council of Ministers.

In 1989, when Haryana heavyweight Devi Lal Chaudhary was made the Deputy PM – to V P Singh’s PM – after the coalition Janata Dal government was formed, his appointment was challenged in court on the ground that “the oath administered to him as such was not the oath in accordance with the prescription of the Constitution”.

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