
HD Kumaraswamy picked up his invite to be Karnataka's next chief minister. (PTI)
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HD Kumaraswamy said he was going to personally invite Rahul Gandhi
Mayawati will attend the swearing-in event of Mr Kumaraswamy
West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee will certainly be there
"Tomorrow morning, I am going to Delhi and I want to meet Sonia ji and Rahul ji," Mr Kumaraswamy said today.
Mayawati of the Bahujan Samaj Party, who had tied up with Mr Kumaraswamy's Janata Dal (Secular), and Samajwadi Party's Akhilesh Yadav are going to be there. So are chief ministers of two neighbours, Andhra Pradesh's N Chandrababu Naidu and Telangana's K Chandrashekar Rao.
West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee will certainly be there.
Ms Banerjee was among the first to pick up the phone to congratulate Mr Kumaraswamy after BJP's BS Yeddyurappa resigned in face of imminent defeat in the trust vote. She also ended up announcing on Twitter Mr Kumaraswamy's plan to hold the swearing-in ceremony on Monday.
The date was later shifted to Wednesday after Congress leaders pointed that Monday was former prime minister and Rahul Gandhi's father, Rajiv Gandhi's death anniversary.
At a media briefing that he had used to launch a stinging attack on Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the Congress President had left the possibility of joining hands with regional players open.
Without tying his party to a firm stand on pre-poll alliances with other opposition parties, Mr Gandhi said the Congress would protect the voice of the people in every state.
"Where ever we feel that the BJP is attacking democracy..., you will find the Congress. This means that all of us, the Opposition together, in a coordinated manner, will defeat the BJP," he said.

Rahul Gandhi had left the possibility of joining hands with regional players open. (PTI)
She had recently blamed the Congress for not tying up with the Janata Dal Secular ahead of the Karnataka elections, saying Rahul Gandhi's party should have "worked more tactfully" with HD Deve Gowda. "It would have helped them," she had said.
In the assembly results a few days later, the BJP emerged as the single largest party with 104 seats, the Congress came second and the JDS, a distant third.
But the two parties quickly worked the phones and arrived at a pact to let Mr Kumaraswamy become the Chief Minister. The Congress, despite getting a larger share of the seats, settled for the Deputy Chief Minister's chair. With the Karnataka pact, the Congress has demonstrated to its potential allies that it was, in principle, willing to go the extra mile to fight the BJP.
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