Relations between BJP and Shiv Sena have been strenous post the 2014 Maharashtra elecions.
Mumbai:
A day after the Shiv Sena decided to contest the Maharashtra civic polls alone, senior party leader and state minister Ramdas Kadam today said he and his colleagues in the BJP-led government are carrying resignation letters in their pockets and waiting for party chief Uddhav Thackeray's directions.
"We carry resignation letters in our pockets. We will resign whenever Uddhavji asks us to do so," Mr Kadam told reporters, after the Shiv Sena ministers met Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis to hand over a demand seeking cancellation of a government directive related to removal of religious photos from government offices.
He said the Shiv Sena MPs have also decided to boycott the all-party MPs' meeting called by Mr Fadnavis ahead of the Parliament's Budget Session.
After days of uncertainty over forging ties with the BJP for the upcoming civic polls in Mumbai and across Maharashtra, Mr Thackeray yesterday announced that his party would go it alone but remained non-committal on whether it would continue as a junior partner in the NDA government.
Reacting to the development, Mr Fadnavis had said "change" will happen in the state, irrespective of whoever came along with the BJP, while Maharashtra BJP chief Raosaheb Danve had asserted that the state government will complete its full term.
Meanwhile, BJP leader Kirit Somaiya today said the party will release a "black paper" on the "BMC scams".
Reacting to it, Sena MP Sanjay Raut said, "Anyone from the street will get up and ask questions? People should learn to stay in their limits."
"We do not want to make Maharashtra unstable. That is why we will need to keep the alliance in the state for some time," he added.
Mr Danve, meanwhile, said the Sena's decision to contest alone in February's civic polls will have "no impact" on the state government.