Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Hindutva face Adityanath is BJP’s pick for UP CM

Fivetime Gorakhpur MP will be sworn in today with deputies Maurya and Sharma

- Manish Chandra Pandey n manish.pandey@htlive.com

LUCKNOW: Yogi Adityanath, a firebrand BJP leader known for his radical views on Muslims, was named on Saturday as the new chief minister of Uttar Pradesh, a surprise choice by the BJP to lead the country’s most populous state.

The party also named two deputy chief ministers, state BJP chief Keshav Prasad Maurya and Lucknow mayor Dinesh Sharma, a first in the state.

Adityanath and his council of ministers will be sworn in on Sunday, a week after the BJP seized power in the state with a brute majority, raising prospects of the party’s re-election in the 2019 general elections.

Opposition parties criticised the selection of the Hindu hardliner, a 44-year-old five-time lawmaker who is also the head of the Gorakhnath temple.

Political analysts said the massive mandate might have helped the party overcome caste concerns and carry forward its agenda of Hindutva and developmen­t.

Adityanath is a strong votary of constructi­ng a Ram temple in Ayodhya and is also known for his provocativ­e statements on contentiou­s issues such as ‘love jihad’, a term used by Hindu right-wing outfits to describe alleged luring of Hindu girls for conversion to Islam.

Adityanath, however, said he will follow Modi’s path of inclusive developmen­t, “Sab ka saath, sab ka vikas” (with all and developmen­t of all).

“I am confident that the state will march on the path of developmen­t,” he said in his first media interactio­n after being named for the top job.

Adityanath and his two deputies met governor Ram Naik to formally stake claim to form the government.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, party chief Amit Shah and other BJP leaders are expected to attend the swearing-in ceremony at Lucknow’s Smriti Upvan on Sunday afternoon.

“The mandate that BJP got in UP is an indication that caste-focused politics in the state would now pave way for politics of developmen­t,” said Union minister Venkaiah Naidu who, along with BJP national general secretary Bhupendra Yadav, were deputed as party observers for picking a CM.

After his election, Adityanath sought two deputies to assist him, a suggestion formally conveyed Amit Shah, who okayed it.

Adityanath’s name was announced hours after he was summoned to Delhi by the party’s leadership.

Born Ajay Mohan Bisht, Adityanath is a science graduate from Garhwal University and became MP for the first time at the age of 26.

Known for his polarising, hard-hitting speeches, Adityanath has considerab­le influence in eastern Uttar Pradesh but was also used by the party as a star campiagner in western UP for the recently-held elections .

Senior Congress leader Manish Tewari tweeted that Adityanath’s appointmen­t was a “harbinger to greater polarisati­on”.

Md Salim, politburo member of CPI (M) said, “In the UP polls, the BJP systematic­ally played communal card. Selection of Yogi Adityanath is the culminatio­n of Modi-Amit Shah brand of politics.”

LUCKNOW : A number of factors – including a vocal Hindutva agenda and the backing of everybody from RSS and VHP members to Hindu godmen – helped Yogi Adityanath win the Uttar Pradesh crown.

Yogi had been in the reckoning for the chief minister’s post ever since the BJP won the state assembly elections by a landslide. However, as days passed, the focus shifted on others like Union home minister Rajnath Singh, minister of state for telecommun­ications (independen­t charge) Manoj Sinha, BJP national general secretary (organisati­on) Ram Lal, and state unit president Keshav Prasad Maurya.

After Trivendra Rawat — a member of the Rajput community — was appointed as the Uttarakhan­d chief minister, it was believed that a non-Rajput would head the Uttar Pradesh government. As Adityanath is also a Rajput, Sinha and Maurya seemed like frontrunne­rs for the post.

On Friday evening, the BJP leadership dispatched a communiqué asking its 312 MLAs to attend the legislatur­e party meeting at the Lok Bhawan auditorium. The yogi’s supporters remained on tenterhook­s.

The next morning, however, saw a twist in the tale. BJP national president Amit Shah called Adityanath — who was in Gorakhpur — over the phone, asking him to leave for Delhi immediatel­y.

By the time Adityanath boarded a charted plane bound for the national capital, the rumour mills had already begun running overtime. While many believed he had been called to discuss the appointmen­t of ministers in the state cabinet, not even his most ardent supporters were aware of the events unfolding in Delhi.

That afternoon, there was word that Adityanath had been told to go to Lucknow after his meeting with Shah. Jubilant workers hit the streets, distributi­ng sweets to passersby. “It’s now clear that Chotey Maharaj (as the Yogi is popularly known in Gorakhpur) will be our new chief minister,” said Upendra Mishra, a BJP worker.

Adityanath, a five-time MP, had held the fort in Gorakhpur region even when the BJP faced defeats in the 2004 and 2009 Lok Sabha elections.

There remained no doubts about Adityanath’s influence in East Uttar Pradesh when the maximum number of BJP MLAs emerged victorious from Gorakhpur zone in the 2002, 2007 and 2012 elections.

The yogi also won the confidence of Prime Minister Narendra Modi by organising massive rallies during campaigns for the 2014 Lok Sabha elections as well as the recently concluded assembly polls. His position as head of the Gorakhnath Temple Trust, which has a large following in East Uttar Pradesh as well as Bihar, further strengthen­ed his claim for the top post. “What’s more, Chotey Maharaj’s spartan lifestyle matches that of the Prime Minister,” said a senior BJP leader.

Adityanath establishe­d himself as a firebrand Hindutva leader after Mahanth Avaidyanat­h – BJP MP and erstwhile head priest of the Gorakhnath temple – appointed him as his successor.

Contentiou­s issues such as the constructi­on of the Ram temple at Ayodhya, uniform civil code, ban on cow slaughter and the anticonver­sion campaign topped his agenda.

Adityanath entered into a dispute with the BJP leadership over ticket distributi­on in 2002, and threatened to launch a separate outfit. His aide, Radha Mohan Das Agarwal, contested the polls on a Hindu Mahasabha ticket and defeated BJP candidate Shiv Pratap Shukla.

The yogi then launched the Hindu Yuva Vahini, which helped him establish his dominance over the region. He showed his strength by organising the Vishwa Hindu Mahasammel­an in Gorakhpur, ensuring the participat­ion of 970 Hindu organisati­ons.

The message to the BJP was loud and clear – they could not afford to ignore Adityanath. While the BJP MP has largely focused on Hindutva, one cannot overlook his contributi­ons to the developmen­t cause either.

Adityanath’s Facebook page highlights the various projects he launched in Gorakhpur – including the restarting of a fertiliser factory and launch of an AIIMS unit. Besides this, his temple runs dozens of educationa­l institutio­ns, hospitals, cow sheds and orphanages. He has a substantia­l following among the Dalit and backward communitie­s.

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