Ruling himself out of the chief ministerial race, NCP chief Sharad Pawar on Sunday said he would not take any post of power and would now be seen only in an organisational and advisory capacity while in public life.
"I will turn 75 in a couple of years. I have been an elected representative for 48 years, of which 25 years have been in position of power. Now, I have decided to stop. I will now be seen in organisational and advisory capacity in the party," the Rajya Sabha MP said when asked by reporters about demand from his partymen to take chief ministership after the Maharashtra Assembly poll.
Pawar, while becoming the Rajya Sabha member earlier this year, had said he would neither contest election or take position of power.
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Blaming former Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan for the split in Congress-NCP alliance, he said it was pre-decided by the Congress. "AICC secretary Swaraj Valmiki, the joint in-charge of the state, has gone on record to state that the decision to snap ties with NCP was taken three months ago and Chavan was part of the decision," he said.
Pawar said the NCP could have settled for 125 to 130 seats even though it had demanded equal seat-sharing and Chief Minister's post on rotation. "When you start a negotiation, it is always from the highest point and not lowest. However, the Congress released its list of candidates even before the negotiations could be completed," he said.
The BJP and Congress had made preparations to contest all the seats, he said. "In fact, we had not made preparations to go alone," he said, adding that his tours so far show that the situation is good for NCP to form government on its own.