New Delhi: From backing Congress candidates in presidential polls to not fielding any contender against NCP chief Sharad Pawar's daughter Supriya Sule to even tying up with ideologically opposite Muslim League, the Shiv Sena has had a history of flirting with 'frenemies'.
So, for those aware of its past, the Shiv Sena, known for its firebrand Hindutva stance, quitting the NDA on Monday and seeking the support of the Congress and the NCP does not come as a surprise.
In the assembly polls held last month, the BJP won 105 seats, followed by the Shiv Sena (56), the NCP (54) and the Congress (48) in the 288-member House.
Founded in 1966 by Bal Thackeray, the Shiv Sena in its more than five decades-long journey has allied with the Congress, formally and informally.
In its initial days, it was often supported directly or indirectly by many Congress leaders and its different factions.
Noted political analyst Suhas Palshikar in his article in the Economic and Political Weekly writes that senior state Congress leader Ramrao Adik was present at the first-ever Shiv Sena rally.
Dhaval Kulkarni, the author of 'The Cousins Thackeray-Uddhav and Raj and in the shadow of their Sena', said that in the 1960s and 70s, the party was mostly used by the Congress to counter the influence of the Left on the labour unions in the city.
The party in 1971 allied with Congress (O) and unsuccessfully fielded three candidates for Lok Sabha in Mumbai and the Konkan region. It backed the Emergency in 1977 and did not field any candidate for the Lok Sabha polls held in that year.
"In 1977, it also backed Congress' Murli Deora in the mayoral polls," said Kulkarni. So much so that the party was also mocked as 'Vasantsena', the army of the then Vasantrao Naik who was the state chief minister from 1963 to 1974.
Palshikar writes that in 1978, when attempts to ally with the Janata Party failed, the Shiv Sena allied with the Congress (I), the faction led by Indira Gandhi.
It fielded 33 candidates for the assembly polls. All 33 lost in the anti-Indira wave.
In one of the most unlikely alliances, the Sena also allied with the Muslim League.
Veteran journalist Prakash Akolkar, in his book on Shiv Sena titled 'Jai Maharashtra', writes that for winning the Mumbai mayoral polls in the 1970s, Shiv Sena also allied with the Muslim League.
For this, the Sena supremo also shared the stage with Muslim League leader G M Banatwala at Mastan Talao in Nagpada in South Mumbai.