BENGALURU — Following a decisive electoral mandate to deliver immediate and stable governance to the people, state party leaders have successfully relocated to New Delhi to begin the critical work of dividing the government among themselves.
While citizens await action on pressing economic issues and regional drought relief, senior elected officials are reportedly locked in high-level negotiations with the party's central command to finalize the exact modalities of a rumored 2.5-year rotational power-sharing agreement. The talks will determine how 10 to 20 initial ministerial berths are allocated to balance competing loyalist factions.
"We are working tirelessly to ensure the people get the stable government they voted for," said a party spokesperson, speaking from a conference room 2,100 kilometers from the state capital. "Once we determine exactly which faction controls which state resources, we can finally begin serving the public."
The meticulous portfolio distribution comes five years after a 2018 coalition government collapsed within 14 months due to internal defections and factional infighting. Records indicate leadership has learned from the prior failure, opting this time to complete all internal power struggles before the full cabinet is allowed to take the oath of office.