Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

A weak SP now open to a grand alliance

- Sunita Aron

With a weakened Samajwadi Party (SP) opening up to the proposal of joining hands with smaller parties, a grand alliance of non-BJP parties may now become a reality in Uttar Pradesh.

Though SP chief Mulayam Singh Yadav has made it clear that the newly elected legislator­s will choose their chief minister after the elections next year, the alliance partners have no issue with the projection of Akhilesh Yadav as their chief ministeria­l face.

As of now, both the Janata Dal (United) and the Rashtriya Lok Dal have decided to wait and watch. RLD leader Jayant Chaudhury is hopeful that Mulayam will sort out the family dispute before the electoral battle begins.

Talking about a phone conversati­on between the SP chief and his father Chaudhury Ajit Singh on Monday, the RLD leader said “not much should be read into it”.

“They mostly discussed their old relationsh­ip,” he said. Chaudhury Charan Singh’s two disciples — Mulayam and Ajit Singh — have no love lost between them. They fought a violent battle for the chief minister’s post in 1989. But it appears the ageing leaders are now willing to let bygones be bygones.

Mulayam’s call to Ajit amid the political hullabaloo could be an indication of his softening stand on fighting the 2017 battle alone. Speculatio­ns had been rife about Akhilesh floating a new front and allying with non-BJP parties.

Akhilesh’s uncle Shivpal had blamed Ramgopal for not only breaking the grand alliance before the Bihar elections, but also scuttling the initiative taken by him to forge an alliance with like-minded parties ahead of the

We had accepted their symbol, flag, policy programme and appointed Mulayam as chairman of the grand alliance. In simpler words, we were becoming a party under SP, yet they broke it. KC TYAGI, JD(U) national general secretary

2017 polls. JD(U) national general secretary KC Tyagi confirmed Shivpal’s allegation­s.

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