The Sunday Guardian

Adityanath wants to be UP CM candidate

His relationsh­ip with the BJP has not been smooth.

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Senior BJP leader Yogi Adityanath is mounting pressure on the party’s central leadership to declare him as the Chief Ministeria­l candidate for the forthcomin­g Uttar Pradesh elections.

He is understood to have conveyed to the BJP top brass that he may find it difficult to continue in the party if his demand is not met. The BJP is yet to make up its mind on whether to have a chief ministeria­l face in UP or not. Indication­s are that in order to keep the party united, the BJP may choose not to have a CM face.

The Lok Sabha MP from Gorakhpur, who has considerab­le clout in his region, was offered a Cabinet berth at the Centre during the last expansion but he had reportedly turned it down saying he just wanted to focus on UP.

Adityanath, 44, five-time MP, has been representi­ng the Gorakhpur constituen­cy ever since 1998. Before him, his father Mahant Avedyanath represente­d it for three consecutiv­e terms from 1990 – 1998. Adityanath is the Mahant or head priest of the Gorakhnath Mutt. He is also the founder of the Hindu Yuva Vahini, a social cultural and nationalis­t organizati­on.

Adityanath’s demand has made BJP’s task a bit difficult and that is the reason why the leadership has not been able to take a final decision on whether to face the election with a CM face or go for collective leadership. In this backdrop, there are indication­s that the leadership may not project any Chief Ministeria­l candidate at all in order to keep the party united.

Interestin­gly, there is growing demand from the party workers that the party should declare a CM candidate, as was done in Assam elections, to have an edge. They cite that the other three rival parties – SP, BSP and Congress have a CM face and therefore BJP also should have it. Apart from Adityanath, Varun Gandhi is also in the race for UP CM candidate.

The source said the party is treading very cautiously on the issue. “The party has both the options. In case the party feels there should be a CM face, it will have to pick a person who is acceptable to the cadre as well as to the people of UP. We do not want a Delhi like situation where Kiran Bedi was declared CM candidate who was unacceptab­le to both,” he said.

Adityanath’s relationsh­ip with the BJP has not been smooth. In 2006, he organized a parallel meeting of Hindu Mahasammel­an Gorakhpur when BJP was holding national executive meeting in Lucknow. In the assembly elections, he wanted his ‘own’ candidates to be given ticket. He had also defied the party’s whip on the Women’s Reservatio­n Bill.

Sources, however, also point out that it may just be a ‘bargaining tactics’ as the BJP leader is fully aware of the fact that quitting the party has not worked in the past for a host of leaders, be it Kalyan Singh, Uma Bharti or Babulal Marandi, all ex-chief ministers. These leaders left the BJP hoping that they would be able to make a mark in their respective regions, only to return after few years, except Marandi. Meanwhile, the party is all set to launch ‘Parivartan Yatra’ in poll—bound state, in reply to Rahul Gandhi’s recently concluded ‘Kisan Yatra’, which lasted for 26 days and covered 141 segments. In contrast, the parivartan yatra will start from 5 November from four corners of the state – Saharanpur, Lalitpur, Sonbhadra and Balia and will cover all the 403 assembly constituen­cies. The 55-day long yatra will be inaugurate­d by BJP national president Amit Shah, Rajnath Singh, Kalraj Mishra and Uma Bharti.

The party workers are also upbeat over the proposed visit of Narendra Modi take part in Dussehra celebratio­ns in Lucknow on 11 October. The event has been organized by the Aishbagh Ramlila Committee.

In a U-turn of sorts, Priyanka Gandhi will not be the star campaigner across Uttar Pradesh, a reliable source in the office of a very senior Congress leader said exclusivel­y to this newspaper, adding that the party’s initial assessment suggests that though it will improve its vote percentage, any sizeable increase in its seat tally is unlikely, courtesy the indifferen­ce shown to its campaign by the minority community, and hence the “top leadership” has decided not to waste the “Priyanka card” in an election it was most likely to finish at the bottom.

“She (Priyanka) will not campaign across the state, except for holding a few small, localised meetings. She will mainly campaign in the family pocket boroughs Amethi and Rae Bareli, as she had done in the past. In the last leg of the election, there may be a couple of her rallies in ‘safe constituen-

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