Political Sensation: Governor Allows Prosecution On Serving CM!

Earlier the Governor served a Show-cause notice to Chief Minister Siddaramaiah.

Update: 2024-08-17 09:28 GMT

In what could be a political sensation a Governor is said to have given the nod for the prosecution of the serving Chief Minister in a much talked about land scam. For the past few days, the alleged scam has been grabbing everyone’s attention. Adding more sensation to the issue the path was cleared for the legal prosecution.

The political heat in Karnataka went soaring up after Governor Thaawarchand Gehlot gave his nod for the prosecution against Chief Minister Siddaramaiah in connection with the Mysore Urban Development Authority (MUDA) scam. This can be seen as a big sensation as far as politics are concerned.

Earlier the Governor served a Show-cause notice to Chief Minister Siddaramaiah. However, there was no response from the Chief Minister. A few activists have been fighting against this. A green signal was given to the prosecution.

As the Chief Minister is in danger of facing the heat with the development, the State Cabinet is said to have called for a crucial meeting to discuss what to do. It is said that the Cabinet would discuss who would be the replacement of Siddaramaiah.

Troubleshooter D. K. Shivakumar who gave his best in the campaign before the elections is the Deputy Chief Minister of the state. Reports say that he might be given the CM post if any emergency strikes.

The state cabinet said that it is standing with the Chief Minister on the issue and the Chief Minister would not resign. The Deputy Chief Minister smelled a conspiracy behind the sanction.

Amid this, many doubt what would happen next in the case if the Chief Minister faces any trouble and how the government would tackle it.

Talking about the controversy, Siddaramaiah's wife BM Parvathi's land was taken by the MUDA for the scheme and alternative plots were allocated to her. However, there are a few allegations that the cost of plots that were allocated to her were too costly.

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