Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

MP, Raj polls: In Mayawati’s solo act, it’s advantage BJP

- Ranjan and Rakesh Goswami letters@hindustant­imes.com

Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) president Mayawati’s announceme­nt that her party will go it alone in Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan will turn the electoral contest into a triangular one as the party enjoys significan­t support in at least onethird of the total assembly constituen­cies in the two states.

The BSP will contest in an alliance with Ajit Jogi’s Janata Congress in Chhattisga­rh.

The Congress was keen to ally with the BSP in the three states to prevent any division in the antiincumb­ency votes against the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). The BSP’s decision may help the BJP, especially in the constituen­cies where the contest will be close, political analysts said. The BSP’s vote share in the three states has fluctuated between 3% and 8% , but the party has pockets of influences.

For instance, in northern Madhya Pradesh bordering Uttar Pradesh, the party has, in the past, won up to 20% of the total votes polled, winning seven of the 34 seats in the region in 2008. The party has a significan­t vote-bank in the eastern region of the state.

Even though the scheduled caste population in Madhya Pradesh is 15.6%, the BSP has not been able to get that percentage of votes. In the 2013 assembly elections, the party contested on all 227 seats and polled 6.29% votes winning four seats. It got about three percentage points less than in 2008 polls when it won seven seats. However, in 40 assembly seats the combined votes polled for Congress and BSP in 2013 was more than the votes polled for the winning BJP.

Similarly, in Rajasthan the party has a sizeable vote-bank among Dalits in the Alwar-Bharatpur and Shekhawati regions, where it received about 10% of the total votes polled in 2008. However, its vote share in the 2013 polls in these regions fell by half.

The BSP’s overall vote share in Rajasthan in 2013 was 3.37%, compared to 7.6% in 2008, when it won six seats. The scheduled caste population in Rajasthan is about 18%, dominant in about 60 of the 200 assembly seats. In five districts of Ganganagar, Bikaner, Dholpur, Karauli and Bharatpur, the SC population is over 21%.

Mayawati said the Congress was offering her party only nine seats in Rajasthan and 25 in Madhya Pradesh. “We have noticed that whenever we contest in alliance, all our votes get transferre­d to Congress,” she said.

Congress leaders in Rajasthan had opposed the move to partner with the BSP saying it would adversely impact their party’s future in the state. In Madhya Pradesh, the Congress leaders felt that the BSP’s demand for 50 seats was unrealisti­c.

Congress leaders in the two states refused to comment on BSP’s announceme­nt saying only central leaders would speak on the issue.

The BJP was delighted at the turn of events. Rajasthan BJP spokespers­on Satish Poonia said the Congress and the BSP were trying to forge an “unnatural alliance”. Madhya Pradesh BJP spokespers­on Rajneesh Agrawal said: “The intellectu­als associated with the BSP must have convinced its chief that associatio­n with the Congress would do immense damage to the party.”

BHOPAL/JAIPUR:

 ??  ?? BSP supremo Mayawati
BSP supremo Mayawati

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