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          Mumbai, May 26 (IANS) It is now out in the open that not all   within the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) are happy with their president Nitin   Gadkari getting a second term, largely because of an internal struggle for   power.
 |  While the BJP central leadership, ahead of the two-day national executive meet   in Mumbai, tried to patch up with Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi and   former Karnataka chief minister B.S. Yeddyurappa, the differences between the   party president and other central leaders seem to be creating new camps within   the party. 
 Foremost among those upset with Gadkari is BJP veteran L.K.   Advani, said a party source, who did not wish to be identified because of the   sensitivity of the issue. Advani thinks Gadkari takes decisions unilaterally,   after receiving directions from the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), said the   source.
 
 Then there is Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha Sushma   Swaraj, who is not only upset with Gadkari but also with Modi, said a source but   did not explain why.
 
 Even veteran Murli Manohar Joshi is against   Gadkari, said the source.
 
 Both Advani and Joshi were absent when the BJP   at its national executive meet which ended here Friday amended its constitution,   facilitating the second consecutive presidential term to Gadkari.
 
 Even   though the BJP is downplaying the absence of Advani and Joshi from the crucial   national executive session, a party source admitted the differences were   evidently due to an ego clash.
 
 "The problem is Gadkari's closeness to the   RSS. He is taking directions from Nagpur (the RSS headquarters), which upsets   the seniors," another party insider, who also declined to be identified, told   IANS.
 
 "Also, some leaders felt that this amendment to party constitution   might not be good in the long run. The restriction put on a party president from   getting a second term was to prevent the concentration of power. BJP does not   belong to a family," he said.
 
 An amendment passed Thursday evening   enables a BJP president at national, state and district-level to get a second   successive term. Gadkari's term expires in December.
 
 Some new power   equations are also emerging within the party. Gadkari has attempted to patch up   with Modi, who was upset with him for inducting his arch-rival Sanjay Joshi into   the national executive.
 
 Joshi quit his party post just ahead of the   national executive meet since the word spread that Modi would not attend it if   Joshi continued to be its member.
 
 This is how Gadkari was forced to   sacrifice his close associate as the BJP felt it needed Modi's popularity for   the next general election, due in 2014.
 
 Yeddyurappa too is trying to   cash in on the differences between Gadkari and Advani. He has been favouring   Gadkari and speaking against party leader Ananth Kumar, who is close to Advani.
 
 BJP's senior leaders had asked Yeddyurappa to resign from the chief   minister's post following graft charges against him. Now he is looking to   Gadkari for reinstatement as the chief minister in Karnataka.
 
 However,   despite the differences, there seems an agreement among the party leaders to   focus on the mid-term elections which the party is expecting, say others.
 
 "The focus for now is on upcoming elections and there is a sense of   confidence in the party," said another leader, a view endorsed by   others.
 
 "The challenges are clear and the organisational structure cannot   be disturbed. That is clear to all," she said.
 
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