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When the party is in a huddle to pick a new boss who can come up with an elixir, the RSS is likely to get a major say as Amit Shah arrives soon to sort out the mess.
The state unit will meet today to decide on the new president. If no common name comes up during the meet, the members would be instructed to give in their choice in writing.
If this norm is violated, the government would take back the land.
The BJP state unit is a badly divided unit but what stands in the way of picking a new state president is not infighting but Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS).
The party has not even called for a meeting to evaluate the recent order from the apex court that referred the Sabarimala review petitions to a larger bench.
The CPM was quick to disown Mohanan's statement. The party's second-in-command in the cabinet, E P Jayarajan asked the Opposition to ignore "stray street-corner remarks". Truth is, this is no throwaway line from a loose cannon. This is official CPM thinking.
Hailing the verdict, Leader of the Opposition Ramesh Chennithala asked the Left-led state government 'not to create issues' by providing security and taking women in the banned age group to offer worship at the Ayyappa temple.
The Supreme Court on Thursday referred the review petitions to a larger seven-judge bench, which will decide whether there is a need to review or stay the court's previous order.
The decision has been taken at a high-level meeting, chaired by Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan, in Thiruvananthapuram on Tuesday.
The byelection results have taught the BJP's Kerala unit a lesson: the 'Amit Shah'-style brash militant Hindu brand of politics will not take it anywhere in Kerala.