BENGALURU: HD Kumaraswamy's grand swearing-in ceremony that brought the country's most prominent non-BJP leaders on stage afforded actor and newbie-politician Kamal Haasan his first opportunity to register his presence on the canvas of national politics. Mr Haasan, who had recently launched his political outfit Makkal Needhi Maiam in neighbouring Tamil Nadu, said the ceremony also doubled up as a "platform for healthy exchange of views with other leaders".
"Curious to see what follows," Mr Haasan tweeted on his way back from the Bengaluru event that HD Kumaraswamy's Janata Dal Secular, or JDS, hopes, could spur a national coalition against the BJP in the 2019 elections.
It is a hope, Mr Kumaraswamy told reporters later, that had made the "historic" gathering of non-BJP leaders possible.
"The leaders have not come here to support me but to give a message that there will be a big change in 2019," the Karnataka Chief Minister said.
BJP's BS Yeddyurappa has predicted that the JDS-Congress alliance stitched last week in Karnataka would come apart at the seams within three months. His boss Amit Shah had recently given the alliance just a year and brushed aside the hype around the front of non-BJP parties posing any risk to his party.
Except the Chandrababu Naidu's TDP, Mr Shah reasoned, none of the parties that seemed to be inclined to join hands to form the front, had supported the BJP in the last election. "So it doesn't change anything," he had explained.
Mr Haasan's cautious sentiment about the coalition of parties also comes against the backdrop of rivalries between parties such as Mamata Banerjee's Trinamool Congress and Sitaram Yechury's CPM that have shown no signs of subsiding. Mr Yechury was dismissive about the prospect of the two rivals joining hands in West Bengal to stop the BJP expanding its footprint.
"Curious to see what follows," Mr Haasan tweeted on his way back from the Bengaluru event that HD Kumaraswamy's Janata Dal Secular, or JDS, hopes, could spur a national coalition against the BJP in the 2019 elections.
"The leaders have not come here to support me but to give a message that there will be a big change in 2019," the Karnataka Chief Minister said.
Advertisement
Except the Chandrababu Naidu's TDP, Mr Shah reasoned, none of the parties that seemed to be inclined to join hands to form the front, had supported the BJP in the last election. "So it doesn't change anything," he had explained.
Advertisement
COMMENTS
Advertisement
Indian 2 Box Office Collection Day 5: Kamal Haasan's Film Is At Rs 65 Crore And Counting Kalki 2898 AD: Kamal Haasan On What Went Into The Making Of Supreme Yaskin Indian 2 Box Office Collection Day 4: Kamal Haasan's Film Earns Over Rs 60 Crore Amid Huge Row, Karnataka Pauses Bill For Reservation In Private Sector Firms Travel Influencer Aanvi Kamdar Dies After Falling Off A Waterfall Near Mumbai UP Banker Dies By Suicide After 6 Months Of Bullying, Body-Shaming Major Crackdown Launched On Terror Network In J&K After Doda Encounter UK's New Government Vows To Remove 92 Unelected Peers From Upper House EU's Carbon Tax Could Cost India 0.05% Of GDP: Report Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.