Shettar is that kind of politician, from the old school where political rivals are to be fought in elections and debated in Parliament, but maintain camaraderie at a personal level. But what led to such an unceremonious exit for a senior leader like him; why were the differences so irretrievable? “I don’t know. All I asked was for a ticket to fight, which I am sure I would have won,” says Shettar. Instead, he got a call early morning around 7 am on April 11, from a senior BJP leader and a union minister that he was not being given a ticket. “He told me they will be sending a letter saying you are retiring from electoral politics. I should sign the letter and send it back to him,” says Shettar. That was the last straw; he couldn’t take the indignity and quit the party. He says no senior BJP leader spoke to him about it. “If Nadda ji had called me and explained why they didn’t want to give me a ticket I might have reconsidered,” he says.