The former Lok Sabha Speaker said his hopes were pinned on "big number of hidden votes" and equated himself to Obama making it to the White House. "We have (the case of) Barack Obama...Nobody thought a black man would ever occupy White House. If a black man can become the President of America, why can't an Adivasi become the President of India," the NCP leader said, whose won party NCP has refused to back him.
Interacting with members of the Indian Women's Press Corp (IWPC) Sangma said he "hopes" that a consensus would evolve on his candidature as "neither UPA nor NDA has numbers ... Besides there are a big number of hidden votes...you never know."
According to Sangma, neither Congress nor the Bharatiya Janata Party has the numbers needed to get their candidate elected to the post and the "third front like Samajwadi Party, Biju Janata Dal (BJD), Trinamool Congress (TMC) and AIADMK" will play a key role.
Sangma said that besides approaching parties, he was in touch with individual members. "The best part is that presidential election is through secret ballot and not a whip. So no one comes to know who voted for whom."
"We have to wait to see how things turn up. As of now, parties are still discussing it and there is still time left," said the leader, who started his career as a journalist in a weekly magazine in the northeast. When asked about the appropriateness of his daughter and minister in the UPA government Agatha Sangma campaigning for his presidential prospects, Sangma said she had started the campaign for a tribal candidate but stopped it as soon as he entered the fray with the support of two leaders - CMs of TN and Orissa J Jayalalithaa and Naveen Patnaik.
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