20 C
Delhi
Saturday, February 21, 2026

Bommai, Yediyurappa in Delhi to discuss candidates’ list

Date:

Share post:

New Delhi: Karnataka Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai and his predecessor BS Yediyurappa are attending a BJP core group meeting to choose candidates for the upcoming May 10 assembly election in Karnataka here on Saturday.

The official list will be finalised by the party’s parliamentary board on April 9.

Bommai and Yediyurappa, last evening, had arrived in New Delhi to attend the final sessions to final couple of meetings to choose BJP candidates.

A meeting in this regard also was held at BJP National President JP Nadda’s residence on Friday night.

Union Home Minister Amit Shah, Gujarat Election In-charge Dharmendra Pradhan, Co-in-charge Mansukh Mandavia, and Gujarat In-charge General Secretary Arun Singh were also present in the meeting to discuss the potential list of candidates.

Speaking to reporters here, Bommai said the central committee of the BJP in Karnataka has chosen three candidates for each assembly seat.

“These candidates will be submitted to the Central Election Committee. The top leadership of the party will then deliberate upon it before finalising the nominees,” he said.

The Congress has already released names of 166 candidates, while JDS has released names of 93 candidates who would contest elections. Many BJP turncoats have been fielded by the Congress.

The Congress is yet to release the remaining names of 58 candidates. In its first list of candidates, the party released names of 124 candidates including Siddaramaiah and Karnataka Congress President DK Shivakumar from Varuna and Kanakapura constituencies, respectively.

In the 2018 assembly election, the BJP emerged as the single-largest party by winning 104 seats followed by Congress with 80 seats, and JDS with 37 seats.

Related articles

PLI: Powering India’s Manufacturing Renaissance from Import Dependence to Global Competitiveness

In 2020, when the world was reeling from supply chain disruptions and geopolitical realignments, India chose not to...

Bangladesh After the Faultlines: Can Foreign Policy Hold the Republic Together?

When I wrote in Goa Chronicle about the emerging faultlines within Bangladesh, the argument was not alarmist. It...

India’s AI Moment: Powering the World’s Youngest Nation into a Future-Ready Workforce

On 16th February 2026, the India-AI Impact Summit 2026 did not merely open its doors in New Delhi...

AI for Humanity, Not Hegemony: Modi’s Moral Compass for the Machine Age

At a time when the world is oscillating between awe and anxiety over Artificial Intelligence, Prime Minister Narendra...