Shillong, July 30 — After his unsuccessful bid for Raisina Hill,
former Lok Sabha speaker Purno A. Sangma is set to float a new political
party next month, an aide said Monday.
"A new political party,
the National Indigenous Peoples' Party of India (NIPPI), will come into
existence sometime in August," a confidant told IANS on the condition of
anonymity.
Sangma finds himself at the crossroads after having contested and lost the presidential election.
The
Nationalist Congress Party (NCP), which he founded along with Sharad
Pawar and Tariq Anwar in 1999 after breaking away from the Congress,
refused to endorse his presidential candidature, forcing him to quit the
party June 20. He also gave up his membership in the 60-member
Meghalaya assembly.
According to sources close to Sangma, the new
party will draw most of its members from the NCP who had backed him
during the presidential election.
Thirteen NCP legislators in
Meghalaya voted for Sangma in the presidential election, going against
the party decision to support Pranab Mukherjee who is now the country's
president.
"The NIPPI will bank on millions of indigenous people
across the region ahead of assembly elections in three northeastern
states," said the aide.
Meghalaya, Nagaland and Tripura are scheduled to go for assembly polls in February next year.
IANS
was unable to reach Sangma for comment but his son and NCP legislator
Conrad K. Sangma said the state NCP unit had not discussed the formation
of the new party.
"We are still in a consultative mood to chart
out our future course of action. We have not reached that state to
discuss the formation of a new party," Conrad, leader of opposition in
the Meghalaya house, told IANS.