Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Mayawati sets her sights on the top slot: She still holds the cards for 2019

At the moment, it is the reclusive Dalit leader, not Rahul Gandhi, who is stitching up partnershi­ps

- BARKHA DUTT ■ Barkha Dutt is an awardwinni­ng journalist and author. The views expressed are personal

Apoliticia­n who drew a blank in 2014 could make or break the outcome of the elections in 2019. Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) chief Mayawati — whose political obituary has been prematurel­y written several times over by the media — has shown that she can still set the terms in national politics and no one dare protest. In effect, Mayawati has all but declared herself as a contender for prime minister. If the Congress was hoping for a Rahul Gandhi-led Opposition coalition, Mayawati’s tough love will now define the contours of any relationsh­ip going forward.

Her announceme­nt of a solo fight in Madhya Pradesh and a partnershi­p with Ajit Jogi in Chhattisga­rh is a warning to the Congress, which remains mysterious­ly complacent about its capacity to build alliances. In Chhattisga­rh, the triangular contest definitely hands over the advantage to the BJP. Assembly elections have been won and lost in this state by wafer-thin margins. The BSP picked up a little over 4% of the vote in the last election; alongside Jogi, it is likely to nibble away at the Congress vote bases.

In Madhya Pradesh, the Congress believes all is not lost yet with Mayawati even though she has unilateral­ly announced 22 candidates. Kamal Nath, who had gone public with his confidence of an imminent deal, may still be able to keep a channel open for communicat­ion and another round of seat-sharing talks.

But there is no doubt that the project of Opposition unity has been stalled, at least for the moment. The Congress, in particular, has been jolted and the whispers have started. One Congressma­n told me conspirato­rially that while Mayawati will not openly support the BJP or Narendra Modi, she can dramatical­ly pull out of the elections right on the eve of polls citing mistrust in the electronic voting machine. Another is convinced that Team Modi has already conveyed its willingnes­s to make Mayawati deputy prime minister to disrupt the Uttar Pradesh alliance with Akhilesh Yadav.

Take the resurrecti­on of Amar Singh and the PM’S jocular reference to him at a meeting of industrial­ists or the breakaway faction of Shivpal Yadav carved out from his brother’s party. Both underline the focus that Amit Shah has placed on undoing the gains of an Opposition alliance in UP. The BJP is likely to deploy its trademark mix of persuasion and the threat of punitive action. Mayawati’s brother is being probed by tax authoritie­s for an alleged 18000% jump in profit over seven years. But if that is the stick, the carrot of a deputy PM post can always be part of a complex political negotiatio­n. And then there are murmurs that the Modi government will announce a Bharat Ratna for Kanshi Ram, Mayawati’s mentor and founder of the BSP, further shrinking the space for her hostility to the Modi government.

The Opposition is desperatel­y hoping that Mayawati will see 2019 as a battle for survival and not flip sides. Also, new Dalit leaders are emerging — Jignesh Mevani in Gujarat and Chandrashe­khar Azad of the Bhim Army in UP — and may slowly occupy any vacuum she chooses to leave open.

The BSP recognises all of this, but at the same time is aware that so far the house of the anti-bjp front is built on the edifice of a single foundation stone: that of a union between her and the Samajwadi Party. Like in a game of Jenga, if you take that piece out or even loosen it a bit, the whole structure comes crashing down.

Regional groups already had an advantage over a weakened Congress; its failure to craft any wider coalitions, and the refusal to move more quickly, has given Mayawati the clear edge in national negotiatio­ns. By now Rahul Gandhi and his team should have made efforts to assuage the sentiments of former Congressme­n — Jagan Reddy in Andhra Pradesh, Ajit Jogi in Chhattisga­rh and Sharad Pawar in Maharashtr­a. And the party should have been courting some new partners — Nitish Kumar in Bihar, Arvind Kejriwal in Delhi, Naveen Patnaik in Odisha, DMK in Tamil Nadu and KCR in Telangana.

At the moment, it is Mayawati who is stitching together a state-by-state patchwork quilt of partnershi­ps — the Gowdas in Karnataka, Jogi in central India and the Indian National Lok Dal in Haryana. In Uttar Pradesh, she will concentrat­e on her talks with Akhilesh Yadav and Ajit Singh with the Congress being a fourth and bit player in that most critical of equations. Her politics has always been unpredicta­ble; her alliance with Ajit Jogi took both the media and politician­s by surprise.

Much could change in the run-up to next year, but one thing is clear: If Mayawati does opt to remain on the side of the Opposition, the next election is not Rahul Vs Modi; It is Mayawati vs Modi.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Bahujan Samaj Party chief Mayawati’s politics has always been unpredicta­ble
REUTERS Bahujan Samaj Party chief Mayawati’s politics has always been unpredicta­ble
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