Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Creating a grand alliance in UP won’t be easy

There are real political and operationa­l issues which need to be sorted out first

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The Samajwadi Party (SP) has placed on the Congress the onus of building an alliance to counter the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). It has sought a share of seats in Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisga­rh and Rajasthan in return for making the Congress a partner in Uttar Pradesh (UP). It has also, reports suggest, offered a rather limited set of seats to the Congress in UP itself — numbers range from half a dozen to eight to 12 out of 80 seats — and is not particular­ly enthused about the partnershi­p. The SP’S priority remains sustaining and deepening its understand­ing with the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP).

The public demands, and the difficult, mostly private, negotiatio­ns underway indicate the vast gulf that exists between the rhetoric of the Mahagathba­ndhan (grand alliance) and translatin­g it into reality. In principle, all Opposition parties, particular­ly in UP, understand the need to come together. The BJP won 71 of the 80 Lok Sabha seats on its own, and 73 with its allies, in 2014. In the 2017 assembly election, the BJP scored a spectacula­r victory, winning three fourths of the seats. Even as the party succeeded in consolidat­ing and expanding its social alliance, the Opposition’s vote fragmented. This experience and the fear of the BJP’S return to power has got all Opposition parties, in principle, to speak about the need for unity.

But there are practical difficulti­es. In UP, the SP believes that allying with the Congress hurt it in the last election . The Congress believes that the SP is being arrogant and seeking more seats than it deserves. This comes in the wake of the decision of the BSP to fight with Ajit Jogi in Chhattisga­rh. The big picture that emerges is two fold. Before the Mahagathba­ndhan becomes a reality, there are political and operationa­l issues — seat sharing and geographic spread — which need to be sorted out. And second, Opposition parties do not have a well thought out plan but are just united by their urge to remove the BJP.

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