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TMC leaders meet President, hand over letter withdrawing support to Govt | Six Trinamool Congress (TMC) ministers, who resigned from the Union Cabinet, met President Pranab Mukherjee at the Rashtrapati Bhavan here on Friday and submitted their formal letter of withdrawal of support to the UPA Government. The ministers met
Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh at his official, 7 Race Course Road residence
here earlier and submitted their resignations. The resignations come days after
the TMC's withdrawal of support over the government's move to allow FDI in retail,
hike diesel prices and limit the cap on LPG cylinders to six per family per year.
Mukul Roy, who held the portfolio of the Railway Minister, earlier said there
is no room for negotiation and warned of a nationwide protest against FDI in retail.
"The game is over. There is no room for negotiation. We will launch a nationwide
protest against FDI in retail," he told mediapersons earlier. Roy also said the
UPA Government was in a hurry to introduce FDI in retail by bypassing the Parliament.
"This is a minority government and the act of bypassing the Parliament is most
unethical," he said. TMC leader Sudeep Bandopadhyay, who was the Minister of State
for Health, earlier in the day said the stability of the UPA Government would
fall. "We are happy as we are resigning for the people. The stability of the government
will fall. We will dominate Indian politics in the future," he said. Shishir Adhikari
and Chowdhury Mohan Jatua, who were Ministers of State for Rural Development and
Information and Broadcasting in the UPA-II regime respectively, also handed over
their resignations. TMC leader Saugata Roy, who was in-charge of the Ministry
of State for Urban Development, and Sultan Ahmad, who was in-charge of Minister
of State for Tourism, also put in their papers. Sticking to her decision to pull
out of the UPA Government, Banerjee had earlier on Thursday said that her party's
ministers at the Centre would resign on Friday. "We have sought an appointment
with the President. If he gives us time tomorrow, we will inform him of our decision.
Otherwise, we will inform him later. Our ministers will submit their resignations
to the Prime Minister tomorrow," she told mediapersons in Kolkata yesterday. After
Trinamool Congress's withdrawal of support, the UPA Government's support in Lok
Sabha has come down from 273 to 254 leaving the coalition heavily dependent on
Samajwadi Party (22) and BSP (21) for its majority in the House. For a simple
majority, the Manmohan Singh Government needs the support of at least 273 MPs
in a House of 545. Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh Yadav earlier said that
his party would continue to lend outside support to the Congress-led government.
"Our support is clear. We will not let communal forces come to power. That is
why I am supporting. I am not in UPA. But we are supporting so that communal forces
do not go ahead," he said. Mayawati's Bahujan Samajwadi Party is, however, yet
to make any announcement on providing support to the UPA coalition.
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