Sunday, June 14, 2026
ADVT 
India

Congress Wins Uttarakhand Trust Vote, BJP Admits Defeat

Darpan News Desk IANS, 10 May, 2016 12:14 PM
    In a major boost to the Congress, ousted Chief Minister Harish Rawat on Tuesday won the floor test in the Uttarakhand assembly though the result will be officially known only on Wednesday.
     
    The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) quickly admitted defeat after 33 legislators reportedly voted for Rawat while the opposition mustered only 28 votes in a house whose strength had been reduced from 72 to 62.
     
    The speaker did not vote and nine Congress rebels legislators were not allowed to vote. Apparently, the sole nominated member also did not vote. 
     
    The Supreme Court monitored the voting and said it will announce the result on Wednesday. But within minutes after the floor test, the Congress sounded triumphant.
     
    Sarita Arya, the Congress legislator from Nainital, told a TV channel here: "The Congress has won."
     
    A beaming Rawat didn't comment on the result but thanked the "Supreme Court, democratic forces, divine forces and the people of Uttarakhand" for supporting him. 
     
    Using words that made it very clear that he had won, he said: "Uttarakhand will be victorious tomorrow (Wednesday).
     
    "I hope the clouds of uncertainty over the state will be over and things will be clearer (on Wednesday)." But out of deference to the apex court, he refused to say what happened inside the assembly.
     
    Most Congress legislators declined to comment on the outcome. But some flashed victory signs and shouted slogans such as "Congress Zindabad!" and "Harish Rawat Ziadabad!". They clearly looked overjoyed. 
     
     
    Tuesday's vote was called to prove whether or not Rawat enjoyed majority support after the defection by nine Congress legislators reduced his state government to a minority in the 72-member house.
     
    But the scales tiled in his favour when both the Uttarakhand High Court and the Supreme Court ruled that the rebel legislators cannot take part in the floor test.
     
    BJP member Ganesh Joshi conceded that his party had lost the vote. 
     
    "The BJP couldn't defeat the Congress in the numbers game," he told reporters after the assembly proceedings were videographed on the order of the Supreme Court.
     
    Joshi accused the Congress of using "muscle and money power" to win the support of its own legislators.
     
    The Congress now has 27 and the BJP 28 members in the house. But six other legislators, including two from the Bahujan Samaj Party, appeared to have voted for Rawat although the break-up is not clear. 
     
    The central government dismissed Rawat's government on March 27 and cited misgovernance to impose President's Rule in the hill state.
     
    In New Delhi, a jubilant Congress described its Uttarakhand win as a victory for democracy.
     
     
    "Democracy wins in Uttarakhand. Defeat for conspirators. Truth always wins over muscle and money power," spokesperson Randeep Singh Surjewala said.
     
    He asked the BJP, which had teamed up with Congress rebels to topple Rawat, to "apologise to the nation".
     
    Added Congress leader Ghulam Nabi Azad: "Democracy has won. It is because of Supreme Court that conducting floor test was made possible in Uttarakhand. BJP tried to kill democracy." 
     
    Despite the floor test, Rawat's problems are not over yet. He has been summoned by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) to New Delhi to answer charges that he tried to bribe Congress rebels to return to his camp.
     
    Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal was among the first to react.
     
    "Uttarakhand floor test outcome is a huge setback to Modi government. Hope they will stop toppling governments now," he tweeted.
     
    Earlier on Tuesday, BSP leader Mayawati declared her party's support to the Congress when she said: "We have always opposed communal forces. Our two MLAs ... will vote for the Congress."

    MORE India ARTICLES

    AAP-Jung War Reaches Rashtrapati Bhavan; AAP, BJP Spar

    AAP-Jung War Reaches Rashtrapati Bhavan; AAP, BJP Spar
    The war of words between Delhi's AAP government and Lt. Governor Najeeb Jung on Tuesday reached the Rashtrapati Bhavan, with Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal accusing Jung of interfereing in the working of his elected government 

    AAP-Jung War Reaches Rashtrapati Bhavan; AAP, BJP Spar

    Indian PM Modi Woos South Korean Businesses, Winds Up Three-Nation Tour

    Indian PM Modi Woos South Korean Businesses, Winds Up Three-Nation Tour
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Tuesday outlined his vision of an inclusive Asian century fuelled by India's progress and wooed South Korean businesses to 'make in India' in a big way.

    Indian PM Modi Woos South Korean Businesses, Winds Up Three-Nation Tour

    India Has Elected A Wrong Prime Minister: Congress

    India Has Elected A Wrong Prime Minister: Congress
    The Indian people committed a mistake by choosing Narendra Modi as their prime minister, Congress leader Kapil Sibal said on Tuesday.

    India Has Elected A Wrong Prime Minister: Congress

    Air India Flight Makes Emergency Landing In Lucknow

    Air India Flight Makes Emergency Landing In Lucknow
    The plane on flight AI 873 was coming from Bhubaneshwar and was headed to New Delhi when the incident occurred as it was flying over Khajuraho in Madhya Pradesh.

    Air India Flight Makes Emergency Landing In Lucknow

    Aruna Shanbaug, In Coma For 42 Years After Being Raped Dies; Outpouring Of Grief At Funeral

    Aruna Shanbaug, In Coma For 42 Years After Being Raped Dies; Outpouring Of Grief At Funeral
    Nurse Aruna Ramchandra Shanbaug, who lay in coma for 42 years, the longest in world history, died here on Monday. Her death triggered an outpouring of grief through the day and at her funeral in the evening.

    Aruna Shanbaug, In Coma For 42 Years After Being Raped Dies; Outpouring Of Grief At Funeral

    It Is A 'Swarg': Modi's Adopted Varanasi Village Jayapur Gives Him A Thumbs Up

    It Is A 'Swarg': Modi's Adopted Varanasi Village Jayapur Gives Him A Thumbs Up
    After the rumble-tumble on the highway and the pot-holed arterial road near Raja ka Talaab, the road to Jayapur, some 30 km from Kashi, feels like an oasis in a parched desert. One does not encounter a single bump on the way to this village, indicating its VIP status.

    It Is A 'Swarg': Modi's Adopted Varanasi Village Jayapur Gives Him A Thumbs Up