No guarantee anti-BJP alliance will stay intact by May 23: Shiv Sena

The Shiv Sena claimed the opposition has assumed the BJP would not come to power

Chandrababu Naidu Mayawati AFP Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu with BSP supremo Mayawati in Lucknow | AFP

The Shiv Sena on Monday hit out at the opposition parties for trying to come together to keep the BJP out of power after the Lok Sabha poll results, saying the country cannot afford to have a coalition government "crawling" with the support of several small outfits.

Taking a swipe at TDP chief N. Chandrababu Naidu's efforts to forge an alliance of opposition parties, an editorial in Saamana, the Shiv Sena's mouthpiece, said he was unnecessarily exhausting himself by running from pillar to post as there was no guarantee of this "possible coalition" staying intact by the time results are out on May 23.

Elections to 542 seats of the 543-member Lok Sabha ended on Sunday and the counting of votes is slated for Thursday.

Most exit polls have forecast another term for Prime Minister Narendra Modi, with some of them projecting that the BJP-led NDA would get over 300 seats to comfortably cross the majority mark of 272 in the Lok Sabha.

"The Mahagathbandhan (proposed grand alliance of opposition parties) has at least five prime ministerial hopefuls... their hopes are likely to be dashed going by the current indications," the Shiv Sena said.

"The country cannot afford to have a coalition government crawling with the help of several small parties," it opined.

Referring to Naidu's meetings with several opposition leaders in the last few days, the Shiv Sena said some people think after the declaration of results, the situation in Delhi (Centre) would be unstable and "they want to benefit out of it".

"The opposition has assumed the BJP would not come to power, so they are trying hard to gain support of all possible parties to keep the BJP out of power," it said.

"Naidu is trying for a coalition but in reality, his efforts are going to be futile. He met NCP chief Sharad Pawar twice in Delhi, but there is no guarantee of this possible coalition continuing to stay intact by May 23 evening," said the Sena, an ally of the BJP at the Centre and in Maharashtra.

It claimed the Left parties were unlikely to open their account in West Bengal, and the Aam Aadmi Party was expected to meet a similar fate in Punjab, Delhi and Haryana.

The Left's base in Kerala was also likely to shrink further, the Shiv Sena editorial said.

"Naidu himself had a hard time in Andhra Pradesh where YSR Congress leader Jaganmohan Reddy seems to be putting up a strong contest. In Andhra Pradesh's neighbouring Telangana, compared with Naidu's TDP and the Congress, the TRS led by K. Chandrasekhar Rao is likely to secure a major win," it said.