New Delhi:Senior Congress leader, former Governor, former union minister and former MP Margaret Alva was on Sunday chosen by the opposition parties to contest against NDA’s Jagdeep Dhankar, currently Governor of West Bengal, in the August 6 vice presidential elections.
“It is a privilege and an honour to be nominated as the candidate of the joint opposition for the post of Vice President of India. I accept this nomination with great humility and thank the leaders of the opposition for the faith they’ve put in me,” Alva tweeted shortly after her candidature was announced by NCP chief Sharad Pawar, who hosted a meeting of leaders from 17 opposition parties at his residence.
Alva’s name was proposed by several leaders and was unanimously approved, said the leaders present at the meeting. "She has rich administrative and parliamentary experience and is a minority community leader. Therefore, I supported her," CPI’s D Raja told this channel. "Everyone supported her, including myself. No other name was discussed," MDMK’s Vaiko told ETV Bharat.
Alva will file her papers on Tuesday, the last date for nomination. Though NDA has enough numbers to get Dhankar, a Jat leader from Rajasthan, elected as the next vice president of India, who is also the chairman of the Rajya Sabha, the Congress-led opposition parties did not want the elections to go uncontested, said the sources.
In the July 18 Presidential polls, NDA nominee Droupadi Murmu, who is pitted against joint opposition candidate Yashwant Sinha, has been able to win support from some of the opposition parties like the Shiv Sena and JMM as she is both a woman and a Tribal leader. In contrast, the AAP chose to back Sinha.