Updated
Mumbai, Sep 19 (PTI): Having blown hot and cold through the day, Shiv Sena and BJP leaders finally sat down for talks this evening after which they gave indications that a seat-sharing deal would be clinched for the October 15 Maharashtra assembly polls and the alliance salvaged.
Shiv Sena president Uddhav Thackeray kept himself away from talks for which he deputed his son and Yuva Sena chief Aditya and Sena leader in the state assembly Subhash Desai, who met BJP's Maharashtra election incharge O P Mathur.
"There will be differences in any alliance. Both are showing no egos... we want to take the alliance ahead," Aditya Thackeray told reporters after the meeting, the first in about a week with BJP leadership.
"How to take the alliance forward will be discussed. Sena is looking at protecting the future of Maharashtra," he said.
State BJP president Devendra Fadnavis said his party had given a proposal to Shiv Sena on distribution of seats and hoped there would be a positive response to it.
"Nobody wants to break the alliance. We have given a proposal and are hoping to get an appropriate and positive response," he said.
Maintaining that the ball was now in Sena's court, Mathur said, "They came to discuss... we have given our proposal and it is now for them to decide."
The negotiations followed a core committee meeting of the state BJP where it was decided that a fresh proposal be sent to Sena on seat-sharing.
There were reports that Shiv Sena had offered BJP 119 seats with a rider that it also accommodate smaller allies of 'Mahayuti', a rainbow alliance including smaller parties like RPI(A) and Swabhimani Shetkari Sanghatana, in its quota.
Shiv Sena had earlier rejected BJP's proposal that the two major allies of 'Mahayuti' contest 135 seats each and leave the rest for smaller partners.
Sena had contested 169 and BJP 119 of the 288 assembly seats in Maharashtra in 2009.
Though the contents of the BJP's proposal were not known, the party had after its core committee meeting said it wanted to swap seats that Sena had not won in years.
"We will send a proposal to Sena on the number of seats we want to contest. There are 59 seats where Sena didn't win in the last 25 years and 19 where BJP didn't win. We want Sena to consider this fact. We want discussion on each seat," former state BJP president Sudhir Mungantiwar told reporters after the meeting.
"We have been hearing from the media that Sena has offered us the same 119 seats we contested in 2009 polls. We will not commit such a mistake of adopting a via media to convey our proposal and send it directly to Sena," he said.
Tough posturing by both parties preceded the evening talks even though they expressed their desire for the alliance to continue "but not at the cost of self-respect".
Shiv Sena, which had yesterday rejected BJP's reported 'ultimatum' to finalise a seat-sharing pact or be ready to part ways, declared it will continue to be the senior partner in Maharashtra where its leader will become the Chief Minister, a major bone of contention between the two oldest NDA allies.
"In Maharashtra, Shiv Sena is the party which gives (seats) and not the one that asks (for seats). It was a bigger party in the state and will remain so.
"Shiv Sena has been in Maharashtra politics even before BJP was born. It doesn't matter whether there is an alliance or not. The Chief Minister will be be from Shiv Sena," Party spokesman and MP Sanjay Raut said.
BJP president Amit Shah had said at a public rally in Maharashtra yesterday that the next government in Maharashtra will be formed by his party.
Raut said a meeting of the party's executive has been called on September 21 which will be attended by all MPs and MLAs where Sena president Uddhav Thackeray will announce the final decision on alliance with BJP.
Raut said the party's core committee had in its meeting last night authorised Uddhav to take a call on the alliance keeping in mind the "prestige of Maharashtra, self respect of the party and Balasaheb Thackeray's principles".
He, however, sought to temper the tough talk by rubbishing media reports that the two saffron allies were headed for a split.
"We have been together for 25 yrs. But no news of breaking the alliance has reached us yet. We have not given any (seat sharing) formula to our alliance partner but self respect is more important," he said.
On its part, BJP reminded Sena of the sacrifices it had made to keep the two saffron allies together.
Leader of Opposition in Assembly Eknath Khadse sought to remind Sena that BJP had ceded additional seats to it in Lok Sabha polls.
"Earlier BJP used to contest 32 and Sena 16 of the total 48 Lok Sabha seats in Maharashtra. We later gave six more seats to them with the aim of keeping the alliance intact," he said.
Mungantiwar listed occasions when Shiv Sena had taken positions that were against the official stand of the NDA but BJP did not object for the sake of the alliance.
"In the past, we did not object when Sena backed Pratibha Patil for President's post and later Pranab Mukherjee. Sena had also backed Sharad Pawar for PM's post. We maintained restraint to ensure that our old alliance with Sena does not break," Mungantiwar said.
Meanwhile, Union minister Prakash Javadekar said in Delhi, "Alliance happens when there is a mutual compatibility, alliance happens when it is mutually beneficial. This alliance has worked 25 years on both these counts. Every party has to understand this."
Earlier Report
BJP-Shiv Sena alliance of 25 years on verge of collapse
Mumbai, Sep 19 (IANS): The 25-year-old alliance between the BJP and the Shiv Sena was on the verge of collapse Friday with both parties adopting a tough stance on the issue of seat-sharing for the Oct 15 state assembly elections, party officials said.
Both the warring partners are holding a series of crucial meetings during the day to take a final call on continuing the alliance.
"It's on the verge of breaking - Only a formal announcement is awaited," a senior state Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader, requesting anonymity, told IANS early Friday.
Similarly, a senior Shiv Sena functionary hinted to IANS that the alliance "is over", but the party has decided to wait for further developments before declaring its stand.
However, a ray of hope emerged Friday morning for the feuding partners with union Minister Nitin Gadkari meeting Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi over the issue.
Gadkari is expected to arrive in Mumbai Friday afternoon with a compromise formula intended to save the alliance.
The crux of the issue is primarily seat-sharing, besides projecting Shiv Sena chief Uddhav Thackeray as the next chief ministerial candidate.
The BJP is demanding both parties contest 135 seats each with the remaining 18 in the house of 288 being allotted to other smaller alliance partners.
The Shiv Sena's latest offer is 119 seats to the BJP, including the share of the other smaller partners, which the BJP rejected outright.
There has also been no commitment from the BJP on who the next chief ministerial candidate will be or from which party.
After BJP president Amit Shah gave indications in his public rallies in the state Thursday that the "BJP will form the next government" without mentioning its allies, the party reportedly served a 24-hour 'ultimatum', which Shiv Sena dismissed late Thursday night.
The Shiv Sena also resolved after an emergency meeting that any final decision on the issue - to snap ties or to continue the alliance - would be left to Uddhav Thackeray's discretion.
Both parties were fully prepared to start filing nominations of candidates from Saturday without finalising the contentious issue of seat-sharing between them.
The sharp tussle between the allies has suddenly changed the political scenario with optimism brewing in the ruling Congress-Nationalist Congress Party camps over their prospects in next month's elections.
As the BJP-Shiv Sena remained at daggers drawn, smaller partners like the Republican Party of India (A) and Swabhimani Sanghatana squirmed with apprehensions over their fate and future if the matter remained unresolved or the alliance collapsed.
The leaders of the smaller partners have been making desperate attempts to persuade both Shiv Sena and the BJP leadership to work out a compromise solution to the crisis.