Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
India

Modi keeps cards to himself, but names do the rounds

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 May, 2014 10:35 AM
    With the BJP's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi keeping all cards close to his chest on ministry formation if the NDA comes to power, party leaders Thursday publicly said there was only media speculation on the issue. Yet names of possible cabinet ministers kept doing the rounds in the expectation of a Modi government by next week if the exit poll predictions get confirmed Friday.
     
    BJP sources said they were not certain about who and how many leaders will be part of the Modi government if the NDA comes to power. The names doing the rounds in the BJP's inside circles include top leaders like Arun Jaitley, Sushma Swaraj, Ravi Shankar Prasad, Shahnawaz Hussain, Rajiv Pratap Rudy, B.C. Khanduri, B.S. Yeddyurappa, Ananth Kumar, Kalraj Misra and Shanta Kumar.
     
    Senior BJP leader Murli Manohar Joshi, who has been opposing Modi within the party forum and had to make way for Modi for the Varanasi seat, could be accommodated as deputy chairman of the Planning Commission, a source privy to some of the thinking, said.
     
    A senior party leader told IANS: "Modi ji's cabinet is difficult to predict. Things will be as never before."
     
    Top party sources said that BJP candidate for the Amethi Lok Sabha seat, Smriti Irani, could be inducted as a minister even if she loses to Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi.
     
    There is a strong feeling that senior leader Arun Jaitley, who is considered close to Modi and has been one of the earliest champions of his prime ministership, could get the finance ministry, considering the importance Modi intends to give to fixing the economy.
     
    Other names being speculated about were that of leader of opposition in the Rajya Sabha Sushma Swaraj for the external affairs ministry and BJP president Rajnath Singh for defence.
     
    Regarding the crucial home ministry, it is being said that Modi would like to keep the portfolio himself. Amit Shah could join the Prime Minister's Office (PMO) and control the home ministry from there, though everything remains in the realm of party speculation as Modi is unlikely to have shared his thinking with many people other than a few people close to him like Jaitley and Rajnath Singh.
     
    "Modi will have special focus on infrastructure ministries and those are likely to go to his confidantes," a BJP leader said.
     
    However, a party leader from Gujarat said there may be more technocrats involved in decision making in the Modi government.
     
    "One more thing - there may be fewer ministries and Modi will keep a tight control on them," the Gujarat leader who knows Modi's mind well, said. Everyone spoke only on the condition that their names not be disclosed. 
     
    Officially, the decisions on ministry formation will be taken by the BJP parliamentary board on May 17 if the party is set to form the government.
     
    Where Modi would perhaps face some tricky situations is in accommodating senior leaders Sushma Swaraj, Joshi and even L.K. Advani. All three were implacably opposed to Modi being named prime ministerial candidate but had to given in to party pressure. 
     
    "Modi has more enemies within the BJP than outside," a senior BJP leader quipped to IANS, even as he said that few people in the party had any clue about who will be in or out in the new government. 

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Modi: Corruption is in Congress' DNA

    Modi: Corruption is in Congress' DNA
    The Congress was married to corruption, BJP's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi said Tuesday as he addressed election rallies in Karnataka and Kerala.

    Modi: Corruption is in Congress' DNA

    Modi's poems translated in English

    Modi's poems translated in English
    A collection of poems penned by Narendra Modi is being published with the BJP's prime ministerial candidate terming them "screams of thoughts" of things he had faced or imagined.

    Modi's poems translated in English

    Voting made easier for government officials on poll duty

    Voting made easier for government officials on poll duty
    A total of 45,383 Election Duty Certificates (EDCs) have been issued to government officials, deployed for the April 10 Lok Sabha election in Delhi, an Election Commission official said Tuesday.

    Voting made easier for government officials on poll duty

    Slaped Again! Arvind Kejriwal Fears Threat To Life Now

    Slaped Again! Arvind Kejriwal Fears Threat To Life Now
    AAP leader and former Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal Tuesday said he faced a threat to life after being slapped by a man while campaigning for his party here.

    Slaped Again! Arvind Kejriwal Fears Threat To Life Now

    1984 Riots Case: Sonia Gandhi declines to show US court her passport

    1984 Riots Case: Sonia Gandhi declines to show US court her passport
    India's Congress Party president Sonia Gandhi has declined to provide a copy of her passport to a US court, saying that government of India had denied her permission to do so

    1984 Riots Case: Sonia Gandhi declines to show US court her passport

    Election Special: Assam, Tripura kick off balloting with high turnout

    Election Special: Assam, Tripura kick off balloting with high turnout
    India went to the polls Monday, with nearly six million people casting their vote in five constituencies in Assam and one of two seats in Tripura. The chief ministers of both the northeastern states dismissed any "Modi wave" and expressed happiness at the high voter turnout of at least 74 percent in Assam and as high as 84 percent in Tripura.

    Election Special: Assam, Tripura kick off balloting with high turnout