Upset over denial of ticket, former Union Minister and BJP veteran Jaswant Singh today said he has decided to contest the Lok Sabha elections as an independent from the Barmer seat and will file his nomination papers tomorrow.
Singh, however, is not resigning from the party yet and said he would consult his colleagues before taking that step.
“Yes, I am filing my nomination papers tomorrow from Barmer. Independent or not, will depend on the party’s attitude,” he told PTI when asked whether he would contest despite denial of a ticket from his home constituency.
The 76-year-old leader, who currently represents Darjeeling in Lok Sabha, is upset over the Barmer seat being given to recent entrant from Congress Sonaram Chowdhry.
To a specific query about his resignation in the wake of his 48-hour deadline to BJP, Singh said, “I will speak about this after consulting my colleagues and others in Barmer and then take a decision.”
Singh said nobody in the BJP had tried to reach him ever since he set the 48-hour deadline for quitting the party.
“If I am not emotional about my home and my party, then what am I going to be emotional about...If the party decides to talk to me, they know my numbers and how I can be reached.
Since I came here, nobody has tried to reach me,” he said today, putting the onus of preventing his exit on BJP.
On BJP chief Rajnath Singh’s remarks that his services will be utilised appropriately, he said, “I am not a piece of furniture. The choice of the adjective ‘adjust’ itself is indicative of the mentality. You cannot adjust with principles and it is insulting“.
Slamming the BJP President’s remarks that the party will compensate him after the elections, Singh said, “I reject the thought and I reject the mentality behind it. Assumption is that they shall form the government and offer me some throttle. They can keep it for themselves“.
He said the “thoughts behind these chain of words are full of arrogance and disrespect“.
On posters of Narendra Modi being torn up by Jaswant Singh’s supporters in Rajasthan, the former Union Minister said, “If the posters are being torn up, then I think the party has to reflect deeply why is this happening”.