BSP to back SP for now, but pact not for ’19 polls
Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) chief Mayawati announced tacitly on Sunday her party’s support to the Samajwadi Party (SP) in bypolls to two Lok Sabha seats in Uttar Pradesh — Phulpur and Gorakhpur — and two more elections this year, indicating a joint push by the rivals to fight the ruling BJP.
But she made it clear that the understanding for the bypolls, the biennial election to the Rajya Sabha and the UP Legislative Council polls in March-April should not be read as an alliance for the 2019 general elections.
In an interview to news agency ANI, Mayawati said she had told her cadre to exercise their franchise and support the strongest candidate positioned to defeat the BJP.
Party leaders Ghanshyam Chand Kharwar and Ashok Gautam gave ample indication about the “strongest candidate” earlier in the day when they announced that the BSP will support the Samajwadi Party’s nominees in the Gorakhpur and Phulpur Lok Sabha seats, where bypolls are slated for March 11.
The BSP has not put up candidates in the two constituencies that Yogi Adityanath (Gorakhpur) and Keshav Prasad Maurya (Phulpur) represented in Parliament.
They vacated the seats when the BJP high command made Adityanath the chief minister and Maurya his deputy after the party’s emphatic victory in the 2017 assembly elections.
A senior BSP leader, who did not wish to be named, said the understanding was reached after several rounds of talks between BSP national general secretary SC Mishra and his SP counterpart Ram Gopal Yadav.
The deal — extended to the Rajya Sabha and legislative council elections — was sealed after the approval of Mayawati and SP president Akhilesh Yadav on Thursday, he said.
The BSP-SP understanding apparently could not develop into a partnership for the 2019 Lok Sabha polls as the two sides failed to agree on sharing seats. It was decided to hold fresh talks after the Lok Sabha bypolls, according to the BSP leader.
Mayawati said: “I will like to make it clear that if there is a prepoll alliance between BSP and SP for the general elections, it will not be a hush-hush affair. It will be an open one.”
According to Samajwadi leader Prahlad Yadav, the current understanding could repeat a feat that a pre-poll alliance between SP leader Mulayam Singh Yadav and BSP founder Kanshi Ram achieved in the 1993 assembly polls. The two parties defeated the ruling BJP.
Mayawati said an understanding with the SP was reached to thwart the BJP’s attempt to capture maximum seats in the Rajya Sabha and legisltaive council elections due to a division in opposition ranks.
The Rajya Sabha polls will be held for the 10 seats in UP. With its strength in the legislative assembly, SP is in a position to win one seat comfortably. The BSP will require the SP’s support to send its candidate to the Upper House of Parliament.
“The SP-BSP alliance will thwart BJP effort to bag the ninth seat,” the BSP chief said and extended an offer to the Congress as well. “The BSP will support the Congress’s Rajya Sabha candidate in Madhya Pradesh if the seven Congress MLAs in UP support the BSP candidate.”
The BSP’s support to SP candidates in the two prestigious Lok Sabha seats has triggered some concern within the BJP.
‘UNHOLY ALLIANCE WON’T AFFECT BJP’
Chief minister Adityanath, a five-time MP from Gorakhpur, downplayed the joint effort by the two main opposition parties to defeat the BJP.
He said his party is strong in both seats and will win with a comfortable margin.
Also, he reminded the BSP about the slogan raised by SP leaders that they will demolish Dalit memorials and statues built that governments under Mayawati had built in UP.
His deputy Keshav Prasad Maurya said BSP announcing support to SP would have no impact on BJP’s chances of winning both the seats.
Dismissing the so-called alliance as part of the ongoing ‘Defeat Narendra Modi contest’ being played by Opposition parties,Maurya, whoisonavisitto Allahabad, said both the seats would be won by the BJP which is out to seek vote on its development agenda.