Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

This is why Dushyant, BJP wanted to stitch an alliance

- Indo Asian News Service letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: In spite of falling six short of the halfway mark in Haryana, the BJP is all set to form the government with the help of Dushyant Chautala-led Jannayak Janta Party (JJP).

BJP sources said a general secretary, who was earlier a minister, was appointed on Thursday to reach out to the JJP, when trends showed BJP may not be able to get a majority on its own.

Twenty four hours later, the BJP was in a position to form a government without the help of the JJP, but still was keen to have it on board.

The reason is not numbers, which the BJP has easily achieved, but the caste equation in a state where 2019 assembly elections consolidat­ed its predominan­t caste Jats against Khattar’s party.

Sources say both the BJP and the JJP have its own reasons to do business with each other. For the BJP, it’s healing the wounds of Jats who used this election as a “moochh ki ladai” (fight for honour). Jats, interestin­gly do not reside in Haryana alone but in Western Uttar Pradesh as well, a state where Yogi Adityanath’s approval ratings aren’t very high, if by-poll results are anything to go by.

In 2022, three years from now when Yogi will go to seek another term, Jats will be a deciding factor in vast tracts of western Uttar Pradesh.

Muslims, the other dominant segment, anyway is not a BJP voter base here. The disenchant­ment with the Jats in Western UP nearly cost the BJP’s Jat face in that region. Sanjeev Balyan barely survived with a thin margin of 6,526 votes from Muzaffarna­gar in 2019 general elections. BJP is mindful of this disenchant­ment and wants to undo it.

From JJP’s point of view, it knows that if it does not align with the BJP in Haryana, it may face large scale defection from a party that has just tasted success and outperform­ed INLD, the traditiona­l Jat party.

Dushyant also realises, keeping the cadre base alive for another five years while being away from power, may be a tough ask.

Also, Ajay Chautala and his father Om Prakash Chautala are currently serving a jail term of 10 years after being found guilty in teachers’ recruitmen­t scam.

But working under Khattar will deal a body blow to Dushyant’s brand of politics that made him the rightful inheritors of Devi Lal’s legacy.

But not doing business with the BJP may leave him insignific­ant and his party in shambles.

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