Kathmandu: A day after the chairman of the Socialist Party, Upendra Yadav, resigned from the post of deputy prime minister, the Madhesi party on Wednesday withdrew its support from Oli-led government dragging it down to a simple majority government from a two-thirds majority in the Parliament.
The angst Socialist Party-Nepal decided to withdraw its support accusing Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli of failing to keep the pre-alliance agreement of the constitution amendment.
The ruling, Nepal Communist Party is now left with 174 seats, nine short of two-third majority. With the support of the Socialist Party, which has 17 MPs, the incumbent government had a clear-cut two-third majority with 191 MPs.
Out of a total of 275 members, a party requires a total of 183 to have the two-third majority in the Parliament.
"We were on board with the government over the issue of a constitutional amendment; that is not going to be fulfilled, you all very well know that our two ministers who were on board have already resigned. Today our party's central working committee has decided to withdraw support extended to the incumbent government under the leadership of Nepal Communist Party, KP Sharma Oli-led government. Now our party, the Socialist Party- Nepal will act as opposition and would act accordingly," Upendra Yadav, Chairperson of Socialist Party, who resigned from the post of deputy prime minister as well as law minister told reporters on Wednesday.
A day earlier, Yadav along with another sitting minister from his party had tendered resignation to Oli over dissatisfaction for not taking the amendment proposal forward as per the agreement.