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New Delhi: With 39 Members of Parliament, the Samajwadi Party (SP) may hold the trump card for the survival of the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government in case the Left parties withdraw their support to it in the event of the Centre going ahead with the Indo-US Nuclear Agreement.
In the Lok Sabha, the UPA enjoys support of 237 members - 35 short of simple majority. The Left parties have 59 MPs as a block and they have been extending support to the government.
Besides, there are parties like BSP with 17 members, TRS with three and six independents, who cannot be completely counted with the opposition as of now.
The SP, which has shown signs of warming up to the Congress, has not made its position clear on the nuclear deal.
Its MP Shahid Siddiqui said on Thursday that the party would take a look if the government comes forward with any new logic or fact. But as of now the SP is opposed to the nuclear deal with the US.
If the SP abstains from voting, then the Congress may be short of majority by about 15 MPs because of the reduction in the effective strength of the House.
The ruling coalition may have to bank on smaller parties, independents and some fence sitters.
But in case SP votes with the government, the BSP may be expected to go against it.
If the Left also decides to abstain from voting on the issue, then the Government may sail through easily because the half way mark also falls drastically.
Congress has 153 MPs and enjoys support of RJD (24), DMK (16), NCP (11), PMK (six), JMM (five) and LJP (four) besides others.
In the opposition NDA has over 180 MPs with BJP having 130, Shiv Sena (12), BJD (11), JDU and SAD (eight each) and TDP five, besides other smaller parties.
Left parties, however, concede that the deal could go through and the government survive if SP supports it.
But, the Left parties still have not given up hopes and sources say they were trying to work with the government on how to reconcile the differences.
CPI-M leader Prakash Karat on Friday hoped the government would last its full term and asserted that the Left was making all efforts towards that end.
CPI leader A B Bardhan has said the opposition to the deal was not a move aimed at bringing down the government but only to prevent it from implementing the deal.
Siddiqui said SP was opposed to the nuclear deal but if the UPA government came up with some new facts related to the deal, then "we may take a decision which would be beneficial to the country".
The decision would be above any political considerations, as it is something which is of national interest, he said declining to elaborate.
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