Mumbai: The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has offered 106 seats to its main alliance partner Shiv Sena for the next month’s Maharashtra Assembly polls, but the latter is not likely to accept less than 120 seats, a source said here Thursday. The seat-sharing talks between the two parties are likely to conclude in a day or two, another BJP source informed. The Assembly has a total of 288 seats. Last time the two parties had fought the elections separately.
“We have offered the Sena 106 seats. But the Shiv Sena may agree to 120 (and not less),” the source stated. The Jan Surajya Shakti Party, another ally of the BJP in Maharashtra, has agreed to contest four seats, he said.
The party, which has a presence in western Maharashtra had demanded nine seats to start with, but its leader Vinay Kore agreed to four during the talks Wednesday, the source stated.
Discussions are still on with the remaining allies, namely, Republican Party of India led by Union Minister Ramdas Athawale, ShivSangram and Rashtriya Samaj Party. The three parties had rejected the BJP’s proposal that their candidates contest with the BJP symbol.
In 2014, when they contested the state polls separately (and joined hands later), the BJP had won 122 seats and the Shiv Sena 63.
PTI